

Orion will be restricted to Apple ecosystems, no?
Orion will be restricted to Apple ecosystems, no?
As another east-coaster, I feel comfortable saying there’s a huge cultural difference in the industry between here and the west coast (and Silicon Valley specifically). It’s a gap that’s been growing wider for over a decade now.
It used to be that everyone followed the Microsoft/Apple culture nationwide (and before them — IBM’s). Then Google, Facebook, Twitter, and Silicon Valley startup culture took over the West.
I wouldn’t exactly call that the hallmark of OneNote, but okay. Have you tried Saber?
I’ve found Joplin acceptable.
I haven’t used it, but I believe the vision was it would provide some assets stock, sell some more, and also allow import of your own. Could allow for random encounter map generation when you need a quick setup as well.
It’s not a terrible idea, it’s just one that was unlikely to be executed well under WotC and Hasbro.
If they can get Beyond back into as good of shape as it was when they bought it, I’ll change my opinion of their management. Until then, they just don’t seem to have the vision necessary to keep digital projects like this going.
There’s a lot of good reasons. Notably, web apps have better security by running within a browser container. And they run anywhere that has a standards-supporting browser. And most desirable to me, it obviates the need for Electron for many of the apps using it right now.
Oh, and most importantly for mobile, they are more privacy respecting than running e.g. the actual Facebook app.
Considering how long web app tools, single-site browsers and PWA integrations have been knocking around, Firefox’s proposed approach reads more like ‘minimum-viable product with minimum of effort’ than an innovative spin on the concept.
I sadly have the same read right now. Will try it when it’s available, but I worry they’re doing this for the “desktop PWA support” ribbon rather than for intentional UX reasons as they claim.
The Bangle.js is around too.
Chromium is code that Mozilla is not familiar with and has a reputation for being poorly documented.
A fully divergent fork isn’t likely to make development any easier for Mozilla. And a soft fork puts them at the whims of Google’s development decisions. If Mozilla needs to pivot, joining with WebKit seems the more feasible option, though that would also likely be a battle to keep a Windows port maintained.
The trouble with relying on each community to self-host is that it’s unlikely to ever make it to the masses that way. Self-hosting is a significant barrier.
I don’t think Nostr can take on Discord. A big part of Discord is the voice chat channels, which, as far as I know, Nostr just isn’t built for.
They do. Well, I should say Thunderbird is also under the Foundation, but is developed by a separate subsidiary Corp (MZLA Tech Corp) than Firefox (Mozilla Corp).
He was CEO briefly, until the controversy over his appointment got loud enough. It makes sense he would’ve been paid the most that year, especially with the golden parachute CEOs get when they leave.
His appointment remains one of the most damaging events in Mozilla’s history, as it led to the resignation of multiple prior leaders (including previous CEOs). Making him CEO might’ve been Mitch Baker’s worst decision as chairwoman.
If only there were a search index I thought was still good.
Mojeek (UK-based) is trying. I wasn’t super impressed by their index yet, though.
If you look at the kwebkitpart commits, it looks like it’s been nothing but localization for years.
Konqueror is more or less dead as a browser. I don’t even think kwebkitpart is maintained anymore since QtWebkit was abandoned with Qt6.
The Noctua fan option should be pretty quiet.
Kind of early to not see snow in that part of Finland, isn’t it?