

The Edge 20 series isn’t on the list and it’s only about 2 years old…
The Edge 20 series isn’t on the list and it’s only about 2 years old…
KeepassXC is for desktop, while DX is for Android.
Sure, I get that. The issue is that as soon as you introduce the ability to install apps from outside the App Store, it becomes possible to trick unsuspecting users into clicking buttons they don’t understand. By designing a web page to look like an actual Apple page, a malicious party could convince users to “opt in” to outside sources, in a similar way in which phishing websites harvest users’ online banking credentials. Currently, this kind of attack is entirely impossible on iPhone.
I think that’s exactly the problem. The real user benefit will be very small, but in order to enable those changes, functionality will be implemented on everyone’s phones to support sideloading. In my eyes, this increseas the attack surface against iPhones. Time and time again alt stores have been used to distribute fake apps and malware on Android, and the victims are often those users who haven’t asked for sideloading and are unlikely to use it intentionally.
Yes, maybe this will enable an F-droid equivalent on iPhone and it will be great to have direct access to open-source apps. But is this niche addition worth potentially reducing the security of all iPhones? I’m not convinced.
I think it refers to an MMORPG related to the Horizon Zero Dawn and Forbidden West games.
The architectures are named after scientists. This one is for the mathematician David Blackwell.
Now, Google is bringing in Manifest V3, a new version of Chromium.
If this is the level of their understanding, it’s hard to trust anything this outlet publishes.
What were the limitations of borg that you ran into?
Here are some alternatives you can try.
ITT: People that don’t know the difference between privacy and security.
Do navigation gestures still work if you use a third party launcher? There was a time when it broke the animations and the gestures became clunky.
I think they run a lot of compute shader, so that they can offload part of the simulation to the GPU, so anything that reduces the utilization of the GPU could improve performance overall.
I used Standard Notes selfosted for a while, but, like many others, I’ve given up due to frequent issues. I’ve been trying Notesnook since and it more than does the job for me. A selfosted version should also be coming soon.
On Android, Glider is a nice client.
The same goes for Ubuntu. The aarch64 architecture is supported just like x86-64 and everything works great.
Thanks! I’ll try out the lists when I get the chance :)
I did read it and, just like your reply, it doesn’t answer my question.
What I’m asking about is a special case that is not directly addressed in the article. If the carrier supports eSIMs, i.e. you can buy one from them directly instead of a physical SIM, then maybe this transfer tool will work, with the disclaimer that it may not work in some cases. But if the carrier only offers physical SIMs, there is no information whether this new Pixel feature will let you create a usable eSIM.
Do you know the Hagezi lists compare to oisd.nl? The latter have also been great for me, with no false positive that I can remember.
Did you encounter any bugs or missing features?
Did you use the latest commit or the release from 2023?