Wezterm, because it lets me easily disable all keymaps and then reenable only those few that I use. I use tmux to handle most things, and with wezterm I don't have to worry about tmux clashing with wezterm's krymaps.
stepanzak
And you had to make a meme about it as if it is a big deal to you...
You will live in fear that one day when you come home, you'll find him sitting in your chair, patiently waiting for his revenge.
He called Lunduke out for often saying that he doesn't express his political views, but still doing it. Nicco specifically said in the Lunduke video that he would not be able to not express his views, but he doesn't pretend to not do it. He literary included examples of lunduke saying that he doesn't do that. Did you watch the video?
I can't find it, but I have seen a video where a designer talked about how you can't just invert your monochromatic logo to make it white-on-black. There's an effect that will make several aspects of the logo feel very differently, even though it's just inverted.
I fixed this on my EndeavourOS machine by enabling kdeconnect in the firewall settings.
I'll try to reword it so it's clearer what I meant: I think developers shouldn't have to maintain more than one package format, and I think flatpak is the best format to be the one supported by the developer officially. Many developers officially support only .deb for example.
Yes, but developers can create only flatpak, where they make sure it works and they officially support it, and then completely stop caring about other formats and community packages. Just like Bottles project does.
Given the shortage of people working on FOSS apps, I'm all in for anything that makes their lifes easier, so tgey can focus on the programming part and don't have to care about packaging. That can be solved with community packaging like AUR, but that has it's own problems.
Telegrapher looks cool
Firefox + Arkenfox.js is arguably better for security than any FF fork, such as Librewolf.