

It’s bigger in both dimensions.


It’s bigger in both dimensions.


I propose a little cultural exchange. I’m sure Framework and Fairphone could stand to do a little cross pollination.


Great, now how about action against the murderers caught on film.


That’s fair. Once you understand some basics though it’s not too bad. There’s a UI just like any router you might already be used to. The most confusing part for someone who is new to this would probably be setting up the VM hardware plumbing, and understanding that a passthrough means that hardware is unavailable to the host.


If you want a dedicated device, sure. Image it with OPNSense and it’ll basically just work.
You can also take any desktop you already have, fire up an OPNSense VM, pcie passthrough your WAN NIC + WiFi card, bridge to a separate LAN NIC, go through the setup, and there’s your router.
Best of both worlds – Debian + Nix home-manager. Debian gives you incredible stability and plenty of usage resources. Nix gives you anything too new for Debian and functionally confines the more experimental end of your config to user space.


Cosmic does if memory serves. I haven’t run it since late alpha but it might be worth a try again.


I, too, hate aesthetics


How are “public shareable links” handled? Are you just saying links generate nicely when your version is exposed on the www or is there some kind of centralized back door for public access?


(just (try (guix (bro))):))
Debian + nix home-manager is hard to beat. Confining my bleeding edge software to be rootlesson top of a bulletproof distro is very much the same – boring (in the best way). Plus the latest apt in debian 13 just feels nicer than dnf to me somehow.
Next level gaslighting. “Is the MIT license in the room with us right now?”


I don’t know much about NYC political dynamics, but a quick survey of Wikipedia seems to indicate he didn’t. By Wikipedia’s summary Cuomo all but owned the ‘Somewhat Conservative’ and ‘Very Conservative’ vote, it just turns out that those groups only make up 18% of NYC.
My guess is his win had more to do with gaining the establishment / centrist liberal vote than any ability to swing conservatives to socialism. My little experience tells me it probably had to do with focusing on practicality. Key points like tax funded busses and child care make voting for Mamdani voting for one’s self interest rather than an ideology.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2025_New_York_City_mayoral_election
Seems like this is mainly for early adopters. I can’t find a single popular app built with skip. Seems like a cool idea though!
I paid for it for years but it’s just too limited. Inbox rules suck. Tags technically exist but are half baked.
Searching your tuta inbox is terrible. By default it sets the search window to a few days, and searching your entire inbox takes (not exaggerating) ~1000x as long as any other provider I’ve used. Where I expect a few seconds it takes tens of minutes to search a time window of ~1 month which for me might be ~1000 emails total.
You can easily get proton notifications without google using youhavemail


Does the word “Macbook” ring a bell? They’ve been shipping unified memory in laptops with pretty resounding success for quite a while now.
Unified memory technology clearly doesn’t require desktop-level cooling and power availability, although it can of course make use of it.


I don’t see how that’s logical at all. Why restrict a technology to the desktop?
Personally I have never had an issue with the build quality. I think that’s more of a reviewer gripe than a real world issue.
They occasionally have great sales too. I’ve seen prebuilds for $650 with previous gen boards. With the pro launch I wouldn’t be surprised to see prices for the older models drop over the next month or two.