They chose Chromium. Which is the base for Chrome (and all other relevant browsers).
Somewhere between Linux woes, gaming, open source, 3D printing, recreational coding, and occasional ranting.
🇬🇧 / 🇩🇪
They chose Chromium. Which is the base for Chrome (and all other relevant browsers).
Technologically inferior to other browsers? What other browsers? Firefox?
I know how shared webhosting works. This is why I wonder why the author thinks containers and chroots are the same thing.
So they say I can run a dozen of different web applications on the same machine all on the same port internally and different port externally and have a reverse proxy forwarding the traffic to the correct port based on the hostname it was called with by simply using a bunch of chrooted environments?
People walking slow enough to pass but not letting you.
People walking too slow to stay behind them but too fast to pass in a reasonable amount of time and distance.
Organic Maps is FOSS, supports offline navigation, and has an iOS version. It uses OSM maps you can download as needed.
Just make a self-sustaining good product.
… or, hear me out, that one is crazy … or … they could focus on the browser alone and make a good product, instead of running a giant for-profit corporation sinking money into AI bullshit and other non-browser crap projects no-one really wants or needs.
Have you tried what the message tells you?
Yes, but reflector can’t do magic. Just manually go through the mirrors and try if they’re fast enough. You should prefer geographically closer mirrors.
“If you enter a room it feels like someone was leaving” - but in an ironic way.
Supports both programming and gaming
Both is super uncritical.
You can install Steam as Flatpak without any real or major issues nowadays and thanks to Proton you can basically play any games except those that use Windows-specific ring 0 spyware as their DRM or anti-cheat mechanism. Pro-Flatpak: You don’t need to deal with 32-bit libs dependency hell.
Same with programing. The relevant compilers are all available for pretty much all common distributions. Same with the common scripting interpreters as well as all common IDEs.
but I’m considering moving it to a VM if the performance impact is manageable
Depending on your VM solution you can usually pass-through CPU and/or GPU and have nearly the same performance as on bare metal.
but am open to exploring new options.
This might be a bold move, but have you considered Arch Linux? You need to do most things by yourself, but the wiki is one of the best and most complete and extensive distribution-specific Linux wikis available. So if you’re willing to read instructions and learn new things, why not give it a try? (Disclosure: Arch is my daily driver since 2008 on desktops, laptops and homeservers).
That’s a lot of text for “we’re not open source, please don’t trust us and please use another system”.
Majority of people also don’t give a fuck about Firefox at all.
So why piss off the few that DO care?
Also don’t add advertising crap that is opt-out and only configurable via about:config
.
Yeah. While I can dockerize those applications, all I checked out lack modern features and concepts/designs. It all feels heavily outdated technology-wise.
federated blog
I wonder what federated blog (or publishing platform) isn’t stuck in pre-Docker era, though.
You can run those as single-user instances or with approval of users so you can use those instances for your family and/or friends only.
The usual suspects: Mastodon (or mastodon-compatible servers like GoToSocial), PeerTube, Pixelfed, etc.
Except Edge is Chromium based.