Perhaps partially. But growing and producing more stuff locally would be better. And perhaps learning to go without stuff out of season might be good both for us and for the planet.
It would put me off using it.
:) Thank you. Yes Mail in a box has been around for a while. Still not straightforward, though.
Hehe You answered your own statement! If it were ever to become non-trivial : I’d certainly do it (even though I know people who do, are bombarded with spam).
Yes… I guess if someone were to only use Tox, the device they were using it on would have to be on all the time, with one of the Tox clients running at least in the background.
Addendum At least you know when the other person is online… There’s some advantage to that.
They’re kept on other people’s servers, is what I meant.
I’ve wondered before now about an e-mail system which hosts the emails on one’s own device, and uses the activity-pub protocol : decentralised email, I guess…
The closest I’ve seen is Tox.
I am saddened that Caroline Lucas is not seeking reelection at the next General Election. She has been an excellent member of Parliament and a clarion voice on the environment.
It’s hard to know for sure why people opt for Apple products… It could be any number of things.
Surely the idea of open or free is always going to play better than closed, locked down and proprietary…? idk
There are RISC-V cores, whose designs have been published, which are capable of running a lightweight Linux distro, and even SBCs with them on. T-Head’s C906 on the Nezha board is an example.
Pure speculation : the idea of open source sells. It’s more appealing than the alternative.
The Sipeed Lichee Pi 4A coming with Debian pre-installed, is arguably the first consumer RISC-V device.
Qualcomm has good reason to focus on RISC-V. I’m expecting them to bring out SoCs as soon as they can. And with the Nuvia team, they have the design prowess to produce some very performant silicon.
:) Nice one! Thanks
:) That’s an idea from the film The Interpreter. I like nice sounding words too.
I used to collect and make up stupid names :
My favourite calendar is the UBPorts offering, but I don’t think it’s available as a standalone app.
The GNOME calendar is okay though : https://wiki.gnome.org/Apps/Calendar
OnionShare is available for Android.