Sounds like a small backpack
illusionist
Wdym, you are poor?
I've got exactly the same experience as on fedora silverblue except that openssh, flatpack firefox, distrobox and other goodies are installed by default. If you want to stick to fedora, you can use dnf in a distrobox.
I didn't have a valod reason to switch. I hesitated for very long because additional benefit was basically 0. Make a backup of your home dir and the effort of switching is minimal.
The only difference is that I now support a European company and not an american.
Sonarr is based on RSS feeds - explicitly designed for this purpose of getting new updates from subscription-like sources. This is much lighter in processing requirements. I've also tried to make this UI as similar as possible to the other *arr apps for familiarity.
Index an entire channel/playlist or get "older" videos. Subarr's RSS approach is specifically for "subscriptions": new video is posted, take some action Media management. Once Subarr kicks off the post-processor (like yt-dlp), its job is done. Use Plex/Jellyfin/etc or another one of the linked solutions above if you require more control over your media
Although fedora is unlikely to break bad anytime soon, it's better to support a distro with a good downstream company.
Did you try Kalpa? (opensuse) unfortunately, I don't know in which state it is. Aeon works very well for me. I've used silverblue before and I was surprised how good it is.
Why do you want to set it up if your experience is bad results?
Like this? https://osmand.net/map/
I'm not sure why they develop it quietly
https://osmapp.org/ is cool as well
And shouldn't you be able to install android apps on desktop as well with waydroid?
What about brouter.damsy.net ?
Matrix works good. Two years ago Element should've been what element Next is today. But it is getting there. It still has great backers and lots of users. As long as there is no direct alternative, it'll get there.
I don't want american companies owning all my data and neither do companies want that.
It's not the shiny new kid anymore but there is no other new shiny kid. Hence, it is still the brightest and newest kid.
I hope nix and home manager become as easy to use and get the same reputation to non techies as brew is and has
Start using it in a distrobox and once you switch nothing much will change except the underlying base os that you don't touch anyway.
Using git is oftentimes a good idea but does not fit your description. Just use syncthing or another cloud thing. You can still use git but without a dedicated berg/tea/hub/lab/bucket server