GPD has been making "mini laptops" for a long while, now they try to make similar gaming handheld.I'm not sponoered nor I've bought this for myself. (yet)
Well, that doesn't sound civil or lawful at all and more like kindoms of the dark ages degree of "rules" where it doesn't apply to a choosen few.
If Meta and other bigcorps that support the US goverment get the special "avoid-judgment" card and you face punishment then there's no law, only bigotry.
That would encourage individuals and small groups to keep their activites a secret (go anonymous) and break the law whenever they can,because the "king and his followers" don't follow their own "rules".
The US is not only getting dystopian, they're commiting primitive mistakes.
If you must use deceitful software like Gmail, Whatsapp, Discord, office or whatever, just try your best not to leak your personal data on them, and if you can hinder the tracking, do so.
If you can use other (preferably FOSS) software, do so, there's plenty of solutions out there and most of them are free, and sometimes selfhost-able.
Google, Meta, Microsoft or whatever corp can lie about security or privacy all they want, but in the end, they only fool themself thinking their monetary practices aren't obvious and they can fool everyone, trust is a hard thing to earn and they can't earn it with fraud.
The product mostly show itself, and you have to go around it to know what's it's deal, if you prefer to not do so, you can search if any security researcher or analyst did investigate the product;
For example Google claims Chrome browser is "safe" and "secure" dispute them giving so much trackable APIs for websites, and having a horrable default permissions, and don't forget the "Manifest V3" transition just to remove ads (and trackers) blockers like uBlock Origin.You don't need solid proof to know what is what.
And then you just type " Foss Chrome Alternatives" or "Private Browsers" on a search engine like DDG where you can find many articles to help you find one (like this) and you'd be done.
Forget about ""Others"" right now, your well-being matters the most.
Again, as I said, whatsapp doesn't feel like a genuine messenger app as much as an oversimplified garbage made for tracking users on the background for profiting.Even the deal of "giving" Llama LLMs (Meta AI) to everyone feels sketchy and look abusive the way it is pushed to users.
Likewise all of meta's services, the only catch with whatsapp that it used to be good and it's a well-spread application, that's why they bought it instead of improving FB's messenger, as meta want to benefit of it's naive userbase who think whatsapp is "As fine as ever";
To you, publicity is nothing important and it doesn't make a good product, to meta however, publicity is "everything" and it shall be all-time high, they have more analytical data about their userbase and have a good idea of what they would do and what decision they would take.
Yes, but how would you know Meta doesn't have a copy of your encryption key (ex: when you sign up) and keeps a copy of your encrypted messages somewhere?AFAIK your encryption key resides as whatsapp's data folder but since whatsapp is closed-source you can't guarantee that whatsapp gave the encryption key to Meta's server at some point when it was created; (or it was created on their servers and sent to your device.)
One would just assume the encryption key is made on your device and never sent to Meta and all the E2EE messages aren't kept on Meta's server after they are sent.
Again, Meta is a company that is profiting on targeted advetising and selling user data, how would whatsapp be a free service without any profit?
As much as I'd like to favor foss and federated messenger apps, telegram isn't as much garbage as whatsapp:
1.The client is somewhat open source and have forks like Forkgram, Materialgram and unoffical clients like Telegrand.2. Telegram isn't E2EE by default but at least it doesn't lie about it and have E2EE secret chat when nessesary, that means crucial chats stay on your device and the rest stay on their database recoverable and syncable across devices.(Yes, whatsapp supposedly is E2EE but we can't know for sure, it's closed-source.)3. You can use telegram as a cloud service with only 2GB per file limit, unlike whatsapp.(There's even a third-party app that utilise this as a cloud gallery.)4. Even tho telegram has ads in large channels, telegram isn't funded by a greedy big-corp and it doesn't datamine you, ads are based on the channel's topic.
Yes, in terms of privacy, telegram isn't the best option, Signal, Session, XMPP, Matrix, or SimpleX have better privacy features, less linkability and E2EE by default but telegram is very mainstream and got more publicity, making it the whatsapp alternative it advertises itself as-is.Publicity doesn't make a better messenger app, but for what it tries to do, it's adoptable for simple users, doubles as cloud storage and is more secure than the garbage being whatsapp.
Immigrating users to different apps is a headache on it's own, but if they know of telegram and it's not privacy invasive, that's not bad.
Yes, that makes it more comparable to MicroOS, which does the same with podman.MicroOS is based on a more mainstream system but it's still immutable with transactional updates.What I'm trying to ask is if the project's goal / development is being more MicroOS or more Proxmox Linux? & whether it tries be a replacement or a different workflow all together?I see that there's a Migration Manager in beta as an install option to switch from vmware ESXi, so I wonder if other OS-level hypervisors are in the roadmap.
I know this is supposed to be compared with Vmware ESXi &or Proxmox but exclusively made for linux containers, so...How well can it compare with MicroOS & CoreOS which rely podman instead?I've never seen a detailed comparison between podman & incus in term of resource usage nor performance, just that podman supports docker compose & it's images.
Yeah that's nice, but that premise & use-case is already delivered,Session does all of that, just in their own "tor-like" network;
Also session is a fork of signal without the need of a phone number, you get an "Account IDs" instantly.
Cwtch is doing the same on the Tor network itself, which is great, if tor's speed / performance is dealt with...
So, what does Cwtch do extra?? Also does it (Smoothly) support obfs4 bridges for firewalled users?
Also, website lacks some technical details, like being a rewrite (& extention of) of Ricochet as stated in their repo & Security Handbook unlike their website's homepage saying "The Cwtch protocol"...But the Docs seems nice & the whole app would be a good option next to session, just wha else it offers?
???No?I said you can run way waydroid on a Wayland Desktop to natively run streaming apps on your RPI5. (Plex, Youtube, netflix or whatever service you're on)This has nothing to do with your TV remotes nor hdmi-cec.(reads description again) oh...
No, IR input support is now integrated into the linux kernel [BPF] & can be manually done with LIRC,Well I don't have a RPI to test this nor use my TV remote to control media, just for volume;Can't say for sure if Rasbarian supports most remotes ether, but LineageOS TV Does (Scroll),
Sorry, I can't help with that, however, a budget, 2.4GHz, wireless mouse was enough for me, maybe KDE Connect or Unified Remote (non-free) can help if you wanna use your phone instead.
CEC support is up to the (media) software &or OS you're using, waydroid is a container-like "runtime" to boot android on linux without virtualization, it's not a an OS that supports IR input or shutting your TV with your TV Remote, I don't think most desktop enviroment does support it nor must, KDE Bigscreen might but it's a DE tailored for such use...
I wasn't going to reply, but when I thought about it, you can install wayland on top of linux.The kind of benefit you're getting out of this is better driver support (from the kernel) & less resource usage (lightweight distro + wayland on background = 2GB~ish ram usage).Also it'd be easier to get Gapps running (if you need it) on waydroid rather than rooting lineageOS TV to do so.I tried it once & it was more than enough for light gaming, IDK about plex but hardware acceleration is supported since there's no VM tech utilized (nividia isn't supported tho).
Most linux distros with wayland should be enough, but check Wayland install page just to be sure it's well supported (by distro),
I see void-linux & ether configured labwc or KDE plasma should fit your needs better.
I also had audio issues with windows in the past,But to be fair, it was a driver issue and it fixed itself when I updated it,It still was random.