I think you are misinterpreting things.
I think you are misinterpreting things.
Anything you can do in GNOME you can do in Plasma.
Just beware that for the first time in your GNU/Linux life, you can CHOOSE how everything works, instead of being forced into a specific paradigm. For some reason some GNOME users find it disturbing 😅 (it’s a joke guys calm down).
As long as you have a Google or Apple phone in your pocket… The car will actually not gather much more than your phone already does… So don’t overthink it.
Have you tried Heliboard? It’s open and has swyping (you have to download a binary blob).
Not my experience so far with my single service I’ve been running for a year. It’s making me even think of opening up even more stuff.
It definitely is useful, I use it for train tickets, or user QR codes for things such as IKEA, supermarkets, gas stations… It’s quite literally a virtual wallet where you have all your “cards”, but they are QRs.
This way, for example, you don’t have to install every single app to get the QR code that identifies you in every market. You just paste them into this wallet and you are good to go!
NFC payments require a transaction platform and these things are only possible with banks or huge, “trusted” companies like Google/Apple.
Although things might start changing in Europe (for now) with GNU Taler.
Aesthetically, very similar, just some small improvements.
In terms of performance, features, etc… It’s way better.
Once you find out we’ve had fuzzy finders for 40 years your mind is going to be blown.
I am not saying AI is not useful. It will be an amazing use case to sprinkle some AI into fuzzyfinders, but don’t let it have everything that has ever been played on screen… Passwords, private windows, one-time messages… You must be very young if you don’t see the problems with that.
There is a reason why we have password protected folders and files, or how we keep some stuff locked online, or how we use private browser windows. And you want to feed all that to an AI.
Believe me, poor kids will save for an iPhone too. But yes, the Mac audience is a bit more professional, although I still know of a couple of dumbasses using Mac because of the aesthetics at Starbucks.
Yes! “Recents” works fine and doesn’t even need to record everything you’ve done and consume AI resources!
For asking about papers and so… You can do that with an AI crawler on your files!! No need to store a screenshot of everything you’ve ever done!
The deliverable thing, again, it can be done by directly looking up your files.
But no, somehow they went full spy instead. Companies will love to put this feature in their employee’s computers.
Wanna fire someone? Let’s see if they used their computer once for an unrelated-to-work task…
Now if someone gains access to your computer they’ll get everything that you didn’t think you even had! So great!!
Hi! I know many Apple users, and 100% of them bought it because “bro, it’s Apple”. It’s basically the “im not poor” message that the Apple logo gives. They don’t care about anything else aside that it’s Apple and it plays CandyCrush.
I am curious why you’d think that is a good idea. I find it absolutely useless, as anything that I’d like stored… We can already easily store. But recording EVERYTHING that happens in my computer??? What kind of data hoarding obsession is this?
That is a small vulnerability away of being the biggest mistake of your life, IMO.
Don’t worry, they’ll kill the project after naming it Chrome Recall, Google Recall, Google Watcher, GWatch (with chat), Chat&Watch, Google Watch (new) in the span of a year.
Not for over-the-internet use
Debian is never a bad choice. Put some flatpaks there, backport some goodies, and install some kind of AnyDesk system. Put some KDE Plasma and they’ll think Windows finally runs well again.
Nope, MacOS would be too different for them to handle. Linux Mint, or something with KDE Plasma would be way better IMO.
Oh, wow, that dude in the thread is proud in his ignorance.
It depends on many things. The webbrowser thing is just because of the size of the package.
AUR is not necessarily slower. It depends on if you have to compile it or not, size of build dependencies…
There are too many variables.
If you install AUR things with
yay
orparu
… It’s pretty safe to justCtrl+C
once. It should clean everything up.In any case, yes, the
*-bin
packages generally are pre-compiled, so someone else has done the effort already, so your install is just way faster.