

I switched to arkenfox since the librewolf package lagged a bit on arch and I didn’t want to build myself. If sites really break bad (usually I can get around it by disabling some ublock settings), I just open a blank firefox profile
I switched to arkenfox since the librewolf package lagged a bit on arch and I didn’t want to build myself. If sites really break bad (usually I can get around it by disabling some ublock settings), I just open a blank firefox profile
There’s also arkenfox or librewolf
Oh yeah I do this, I’ll raise you that mine also sshs into my server to update the editor theme
Hey that’s pretty good, I’m gonna steal it. It might even be worth making a pullrequest to update swaylock to have a flag to do this, I use waybar and it has a lock inhibit button that I use before I start watching anything, but automating it like this is seems super nice
Yeah I only really use it for personal stuff for that reason. There’s a vscode plugin, but last time I tried it it was really slow
A keyboard and terminal based text editor, similar in some ways to neovim, vim, and vi
Agree on all counts. I didn’t like finding and comparing plugins for neovim, and then wrestling with environment stuff to get them to work, and having to change a bunch of options to get nvim to work how I want. With helix, my config of things I’ve changed from default is very small, and there’s no wrestling with plugins.
And yeah, “select then act” feels a lot smoother and more intuitive to me. If you like that and like plugins tho, check out kakuone
I used neovim but recently switched to helix and highly recommend it. If you haven’t tried nvim yet, give helix a try before deciding. A good way to compare is do the tutorial of each and see which you like more nvim +Tutor
and hx --tutor
(orhelix --tutor
).
If you’re a current vim user the helix keybindings are only a small learning curve after the tutorial, and feel a lot smoother imo
Idk I’ve had pretty good experiences buying used ones (or new-in-box but cheaper on swappa) and using grapheneos
I would’ve preferred tab groups like vanadium/chrome has, but this is ok too
I mainly use git with cli, the one thing that’s been super helpful in vscode is gitlens, which shows you who last updated the line you’re on, and lets you look at the commit
Except it’s not all messaging apps cause google messages is the only android messaging app with rcs support
Hmm, the problem is I have multiple sizes of monitors. I suppose I could do that for each monitor instead of just applying it to the wildcard monitor
Very cool, and +1 for accrescent, although an fdroid or izzy release would be nice. How does it compare to sayboard? https://github.com/ElishaAz/Sayboard
Tree style tabs is amazing, +1 for that
Librewolf is quick to update, it’s just a hardened fork of firefox
Just use librewolf or something, or if they incorporate ai, I’d be surprised if an ai-free fork doesn’t pop up quickly
Set up a usb with ventoy and try a bunch of distros. If you have 64gb ram you should even be good to download a game and try it out from the live environment
No