Your link has no article, and Video inside Flash file (swf) that itn’t opening in 2024.
And I don’t want to install Flash on my machine…
Your link has no article, and Video inside Flash file (swf) that itn’t opening in 2024.
And I don’t want to install Flash on my machine…
Have you tried Flutter?
I didn’t develop on it, but I’ve used recently one app written in it and it was hot pile of garbage.
It was slow as a slug, and eat lot of CPU. I’ve also checked web eversion and was astonished as it rendered everything into canvas. It’s really poor design choice to render everything by app itself.
I guess it was just buggy app, but I didn’t try other apps in flutter, so can’t compare.
But web demo of flutter UI components with list box was also not so fast. But perhaps it’s just web version. Didn’t know any example of good flutter app.
It explains why HAL got mad. To be honest I never watch original in full. Started watching and got bored. But watched 2010 in one go. I don’t know why. It was inspiration to watch it after I saw this film mentioned in one YT video.
I liked that it touch topic of war between US and USSR. And I really enjoyed quality of Practical Effects.
They just should let users choice to use older version, like concise games that strive on mods do. Like Rimworld or ONY
Did you watch second part, 2010: The Year We Make Contact? Really like quality of effects.
Would it ever support Windows?
I know that some KDE apps do.
I’ve just tried Qt based matrix client. Compared to Electron based Element.
It’s nice, snappy, beautiful, and eats WAY less RAM. But it lacks lot of feature. That’s sad.
Then they shouldn’t! Just give users website and be done with it.
Now you can even allow websites work offline and install them “like” an app with proper manifest.
I believe it uses gtk-webview. So on KDE system you would use GTK as a base. But you anyway would have GTK libs in your system.
Is zoom Electon?
It looks like shit and feels like shit. I thought it was native tbh… given how chunky UI is. Looks like GDI programming to me. Or they took design from Android 2 and ported it to Desktop.
I think that’s what is learnt on Design courses at university. Also ergonomics.
But IDK. I saw “professional” web-designers who don’t consider colorblind peoples in their colors.
But I didn’t ask if they had professional education.
I haven’t use any alternatives, and haven’t developed with electron, but I know that there are another alternative – Tauri. It also uses web-view. It’s built in Rust and allows apps to be developed in JS (providing JS api) and in Rust.
What I can say – JS support won’t be cross-platform, like we have with NodeJS in electron. Special debug per platform might be required.
Yeah. But Lemmy doesn’t add @username to it’s replies.
That’s funny, given that Discord is proprietary, and confining it in sandbox would give most benefits.
No, it’s not nice decision. It’s more political decision, to force Ubuntu’s own solution instead of alternative.
(I’m wondering if you would be notified for reply in mastodon?)
That’s if we didn’t blow yourself out :)
Hello, @dessalines@lemmy.ml.
I’ve tried to mention myself from mastodon, but as result message wasn’t federated and delivered. At this comment https://lemmy.ml/comment/405537
Would it be appropriate to create feature request on github, to send notifications to federated instances on mentions?
And also would people from lemmy receive notifications, like in this case https://lemmy.ml/comment/405208 ? Can’t test because I have only one account. But I assume they won’t, the same way as it wasn’t delivered to Mastodon.
My use-case is that there were two neighboring threads of replies, and I wanted to both participant to be notified, but not to create two separate comments under two different messages.
Asking you as you are one of maintainers of Lemmy.
I understand that sand-boxing can be achieved by other means, and flatpak is using kernel facilities. But this is actually way to make it mainstream, and ease applications packaging. Similar thing to what happens on mobile platforms, like Android and UWP(bruh). So this is actually progress to better and safer desktop. Not perfect yet.
Most flatpaks don’t require access to root or home fs, so host files are shielded. Only way to access fs is using file access dialogs and Drag’n’Drop(which is broken currntly)
good sandboxing has to be configured by trusted 3rd parties, like package maintainers, not by upstream developers, because the latter creates a conflict of interest.
Unfortunately this is true. But you can check defined permissions before installing app. And user would be notified it application after update requires more permissions.
But I guess flathub maintainers won’t check/review packages, so not ideal.
Suggestion at the end:
<a class="boom" href="https://boom .arielaw.ar">hehe</a>
Wouldn’t it destroy GoogleBot (and other search engine) those making your site delisted from Search?