There are a handful of repos that have also been updating the extensions too, so all good. Most active seems to be from keiyoushi.
Tachiyomi is dead, long live Tachiyomi.
Just someone running away from Reddit.
There are a handful of repos that have also been updating the extensions too, so all good. Most active seems to be from keiyoushi.
Tachiyomi is dead, long live Tachiyomi.
Nah, their question is why do so many people use it. And the answer is because it’s pretty good.
It’s pretty good, innit?
It is not, you may be confusing it with retrodeck, which is solely distributed as a flatpak.
The AGPL applies copyleft to web services. If you’re learning about licensing, it might be worth googling copyleft. Fascinating concept, and, in my opinion, something to subscribe to.
AGPL-3.0
Nice
I have a 1tb drive from them, still going strong 6 years in.
It isn’t, it’s just different. I use NixOS because of stupid easy rollbacks, which is great for experimenting in production, and its declarative nature, which is great in a server setting.
Just keep using the layout you’re used to. I’m Brazilian too, but I’ve lived abroad my whole life, and US layout is what I’m most used to (even though I’ve never lived there, funny enough). When I’m on other keyboards, I just switch the layout to US International, and stop looking at the keyboard.
That dongle looks plenty enough to me.
The deck shines with its default OS, and while installing other OSs is possible, it’s probably not gonna be a great time. Though you may not need to, as the deck’s desktop mode is pretty capable for light browsing/working. Especially now with the addition of the nix package manager.
As for the dock stuff, you’re not wrong, but a dongle would work just well as a dock, so if you want to wall mount it, you just need to leave enough space to hang a dongle to it.
Overall, a beelink would probably work best, and give you fewer headaches if a desktop is what you’re looking for, but the deck has the portability/handheld factor. It’s really gonna be up to your needs, which one is better.
Yeah, he continued with BA for a while after the fallout, so I didn’t know he’d eventually started his own channel too.
Internet historian sponsor segments are hillarious.
It only stores files, so there’s no need for wine support, as far as I understand.
Edit: looks like I was wrong, their client seems somewhat capable.
I’m not sure how it’d work for freebsd, but on Linux, you can get sshd running in your initrd. You can even go as far as getting an onion service running in your initrd, and using that for remote access.
It’s a fork of gittea aiming to accelerate federation support.
I also find it absolutely hilarious that you were considering monetising a product named Crackpipe. Not sure how successful you’d be at that.
Aye.