Lineage is great, been using it for years
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Try Docker, or if you want to invest a bit more learning time for a huge convenience pay off: NixOS
muix@lemmy.sdf.orgto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Proton CEO embraces Trump for "standing up for the little guys"5·6 months agoWhen you register a domain, you own the whole name-space of that domain:
All possible sub-domains of your domain are yours. All possible URLs on the domain are yours. All possible email addresses on the domain are yours.
On your domain, you are also free to choose the linked services such as web, email calendar etc. If you are not satisfied with one provider, you are free to switch to another one at your own convenience.
I made a similar meme! I like your format too :)
muix@lemmy.sdf.orgto Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world•Interesting new symbols for bathroom doors2·6 months agoA q p W
muix@lemmy.sdf.orgto politics @lemmy.world•‘They’re Eating the Cats’: American Woman Jailed in Ohio124·7 months agoThat cat had a horrific death, yet somehow still better than most pigs in the US. That judge should imprison all slaughterhouse owners.
Same here, wtf is that?
Let me recommend Migadu, as email privacy is kind of a difficult topic. They offer complete email freedom for a very reasonable price; $20 ($10 for students) a year. They explain my main reasoning why I would avoid Proton:
When an email provider rations email address of your own domain name-space at a fee, they are asking you to hand them over control of your name-space. There is zero cost associated with additional email addresses and it is time you learn about it.
When email provider does not offer you standard email protocols that work with standard email clients, they want to lock you in for good. You are tied to using the dedicated applications offered by provider. The freedom of using a better or more suitable application is taken away from you. Protocols were standardized for a reason and today there are hundreds of email clients built for users with different needs.
When email provider alters messages data in non-standard format, they deny you data portability and with it freedom of changing providers.
Email is a collective effort of messaging interoperability. It is built around open, public standards and runs mostly on open source software maintained by folks believing in an open Internet, privacy and personal freedoms. Let’s not give away our freedoms for some Kool-Aid.
Window managers in Linux take direct command from the display server (Xorg, Wayland, etc.) to decide where to position windows and what they should look like. Whereas “window managers” on MacOS/Windows are tricking the original window manager provided by the OS into positioning windows a certain way. I’m simplifying here, but hope that clears things up.