The thought emporium has a great series of videos of the work they are doing related to this.
andruid
I hope we see more composable desktop apps in the FOSS space so that we can at least get more UI options for a given backend. Maybe then we can get closer to what users want. The other option more low code options, so users with more domain expertise and build UXs like they want.
Both the results of consultation of power in the hands of few over then many. State capitalism and private capitalism have, as expected, parrells in results.
Also being synonymous with "using Google", where people thought they had to get chrome to use Google.com.
Well new project for me to look into thanks. I have only seen petals as a distributed inference engine, so seeing more in the space would be promising.
Immutable and popular are pretty far from each other at the moment, and this coming from someone running kinote now!
To expand on why snaps are Ubuntu only is because the back end for snap distribution is proprietary.
FreeOTP+ has been good to me
Honestly wish a matrix client that made Facebook,discord,sms,signal, bridging existed. I also hate jumping between chats. People know signal is the way to a hold of me (it's on my computer and phone!), Sms/calls are the next, and anything else is like throwing paper airplanes at my house.
I don't like it personally, I don't contribute to projects that are designed to easily feed non-free systems. There is a lot of corporate influence both direct, but even more in people catering to companies potential of exploitation in order to maximize there and the projects value to corporate interests.
It's common for these people to just not see these as tools that "normal" people need, but as tools for companies that admins, and devs use. This is in stark contrast as to when gnu utils were deved
Depends on your security model IMHO. If unencrypted dns traffic on your network, or your router being a possible aggretion point for dns requests from devices on your network is fine, then it is a great way to simplify using it for your network.
I imagine it's probably good for 98% of people.