

Isn’t SailfishOS proprietary?


Isn’t SailfishOS proprietary?


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GrapheneOS is probably the best choice if you care about privacy nowadays. The only con is it only supports Pixel and future Motorola phones.
If your phone supports something like LineageOS, that’d also be a step up from stock Android or big-tech distributions, although it’s not as good as GrapheneOS.
Yeah, but unfortunately most TVs don’t support DisplayPort. Although that reminds me someone made patches to the Linux kernel to enable 4k@120 Hz through HDMI without color degradation on AMD GPUs. I haven’t heard much about them since they were brought up in media, but if I recall correctly CachyOS included them in their kernel.


Regardless of AI, Heroic is a much better alternative unless you need some niche integration that Lutris provides. The Lutris developer is super stubborn about the most strange stuff, like absolutely refusing to upgrade the runtime of the flatpak because of some obscure controller regression. He’d rather see poor performance with super old mesa libraries and poor security for the majority.
But yeah, the heavy AI usage just makes me even more hesitant to use or recommend Lutris.


Out of curiosity, why foes F-Droid warn about anti-features?
På tal om Play Integrity, många implementeringar av EUDI verkar använda sig av det (efter rekommendationer från dokumentationen), och det har diskuterats väldigt mycket, bl.a. här:
https://github.com/eu-digital-identity-wallet/eudi-app-android-wallet-ui/issues/287
En utvecklare/ingenjör från GrapheneOS är väldigt aktiv i diskussionerna på GitHub.
Digg håller på och tar fram den svenska implementeringen och jag tänkte skicka mail och fråga dem om de bara kommer använda sig av Play Integrity eller om det kommer finnas fler alternativ. Jag har redan frågat hur det står till med kraven på öppen källkod men jag fick dessvärre inte mycket till svar, så vi får vad de svarar nu.
Jag återkommer med svar om ni är intresserade.
I shower twice a day, once in the morning and once in the evening.


A growing minority wants to avoid investing in US big corp, or in anything US related in general given the current political situation.
I’m definitely one of those people but there just aren’t that many alternatives. Like I said, I did consider Fairphone, but there were so many cons to their devices that it’s just not a reasonable choice for me personally. Which is unfortunate.
Thanks.


I wouldn’t trust any device made by them, regardless of the OS.
What device would you trust?
Edit to say you are basically just rewarding their behaviour.
That’s a good point and it’s one I’ve been considering. I would’ve bought a second-hand phone if it weren’t for the fact that the second-hand market in my country is so bad to the point it’s not even worth considering.


Thanks for the response!
Currently, the Pixel 10 goes for 600€ including taxes, while the Pixel 9a goes for 370€. Both are on sale right now. The iPhone 17 and the Samsung S26 meanwhile both go for 1015€ and 1106€, respectively, just for price comparison. Would you still go with the 9a over the 10 in this case?


I’m gonna have to replace my phone soon since it doesn’t receive security updates any more and I was thinking of going for GrapheneOS. What do you guys think about getting a Pixel 10 for that purpose? My second choice would be an iPhone but it’s both a lot more expensive and also less privacy respecting.
I was also considering a Fairphone but despite rating the repariability highly, there were too many other cons to the device.


There doesn’t seem to be any improvements in how GNOME handles multiple monitors so it’s still not a viable option for me. But I guess it’s nice to see them implementing features other users want.


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That’s a great watch, highly recommended.


Huh? Why?


as far as I know, there is no way to put a valid certificate like let’s encrypt for a service that is not accessible from the net
There definitely is. All of my local services run on a wildcard cert that I got from a DNS challenge with Let’s Encrypt. As long as the reverse proxy can access whatever source is issuing the certificate, and as long as the client browser can access public certificate ledgers and has DNS info about your services, things will work just fine locally.
I recommend Netbird to give access to services to your family members, for access control and for the DNS server it provides. It also gives you the bonus of accessing your services remotely.
Feel free to ask if you have any questions.
Are you implying that gaming on a 120 Hz 4k OLED TV is somehow bad?