Andromxda
Depends on your desktop environment. HDR works just fine in KDE.
Looks like they still haven't learned their lesson from the Windows 8 days...
This reminds me of the time when they broke the ability to disable the god damn Windows 10 lockscreen from the registry. Like why??? What the actual fuck is the reasoning behind this microsoft?!?!? You're actually paying people to put in the work and make the user experience worse for absolutely no reason, while not even benefitting from it in any way??? This is one of the reasons I will never touch any of this proprietary Microsoft garbage again and strictly use FOSS software, which actually respects the user.
Pressing Alt + F4 on the desktop brings up the Shutdown menu. You can fully navigate it using the keyboard. Back in my Windows times I found this more convenient than using the start menu.
If you use iOS, you have no other option. But on Android I would recommend just using the system Private DNS (DoT) instead.
When using the network-wide VPN configuration of my firewall, I also use OPNSense to enforce that all devices connect to my self-hosted Pi-Hole, including redirecting DNS packets that are sent to DNS servers other than my Pi-Hole IP. There's a pretty cool guide for this: https://forum.opnsense.org/index.php?topic=9245.0
When running a VPN client on a device, I just use the VPN to manage DNS settings.
Both Mullvad and IVPN have very solid DNS settings within their desktop clients. Proton VPN unfortunately lacks behind in this regard. That's why I never use any Proton VPN clients on desktop, and rely on OPNSense, if I want to use Proton.
So it knows about all metadata
Metadata is encrypted on the client-side using Signal's sealed sender implementation. The client also removes as much metadata as possible. All of this is open-source and happens in the client application.
plus registration with phone number
Signal doesn't store phone numbers. It derives a user id from your phone number along with other parameters. It's in the open-source server code, you can check it out yourself.
you need to use the client built by Signal
No you don't. I myself use a fork of Signal called Molly.
with dependencies from Google Services and the like
Not true again. You don't need to use the official binary that includes Google libraries. These aren't required for the app to function. You can use Signal-FOSS or Molly-FOSS, and it works just fine.
and you can’t use one built from the source they provide
If this was true, forks like Signal-FOSS or Molly wouldn't exist.
Which at that point means they can introduce whatever they want in whichever version.
Stupid conclusion, because all of your previous points are false
Stop spreading false information, focus on the facts.
Sorry man. I really need to read the entire thread carefully. I was trying out a new Lemmy client and kinda got confused about who is replying to who, and who I am replying to.
That kind of usage should be fine, it doesn't really matter. Just wouldn't use it for my primary mobile device.
Yes, it is much worse than stock Android
https://madaidans-insecurities.github.io/android.html#lineageos
I use ruTorrent, pretty happy with it