

I use Revolut with no issue on GrapheneOS. Maybe things changed.


I use Revolut with no issue on GrapheneOS. Maybe things changed.


Yeah, but at least in KDE, when I search for something that it can’t find on the PC, it gives you the option to “search blah with duckduckgo in firefox” instead of starting a web search immediately, waiting for it to finish, and showing the results in your start menu in front of whatever you actually wanted to find on your PC. It’s the fallback and not the default.


If I can’t resize the giant taskbar, then what’s the point?


I’ve been playing tons of games with this on my couch, currently playing RE9, and I love it. Trackpad + gyro is an amazing combo for aiming with a controller. I’ve been wanting this exact controller for years since I got my Steam Deck andit was worth it, especially for couch play.


comm -1 -2 <(pacman -Qqm | sort) <(curl -s https://md.archlinux.org/s/SxbqukK6IA | sort)
DNS blocking doesn’t work with cookie prompts since they’re from the same domain as the website. You need something like ublock origin which has the feature to block specific DOM components on the website.
Ah yes, the first last update.


It’s not. It depends on how open the phone is and if it relies on exploits to root or if there’s an official method. Pixels are open and you can just install whatever you want on them, with open source drivers (although Google is trying to stop that too). So to install Graphene, for instance, it’s literally a web app with one or two clicks to do it automatically.


Fair. Unfortunately, mine don’t.


You can’t use Google Wallet to pay with NFC, they don’t have Miracast, and Chromecast can supposedly work but I haven’t been able to get it to work. Those are the three major hurdles I’ve found, but getting away from Google was a priority so I’ll live without them.
NFC can have other providers other than Google Wallet, but I haven’t found any that I find trustworthy enough yet. Supposedly the EU is making an alternative.
This isn’t foolproof. A lot of malware these days is resistant to analysis because they can detect that they’re running in a sandbox and refuse to run the malicioua code.


AdventureQuest Worlds my beloved


I’d say that the principal claim is that they can’t see your messages and that they have no incriminating data on you. No judge can order them to hand over your data and incriminate you because they don’t have that data. What exactly is the very little data they have is less important.


Yeah, they likely misremembered that it was timestamps instead of IPs.


Which claim are you referring to?


It’s been proven in court several times. The only information they keep is your phone number, unix timestamp of your account creation, and the unix timestamp of when you were last online.
Actually, I just checked with Wireshark, and no traffic left my PC when I searched for a name of a flatpak app, not until I actually opened Discover to look for the app. Discover has a local cache and KRunner uses that for app searches.