Doesn’t gnome already have this?
Doesn’t gnome already have this?
I use a Misskey fork for micro blogging and I can’t even get Lemmy posts to load. The profiles of communities do, but that’s it.
Ah right. What I really meant to ask was if it can do protocols other than http.
Which I don’t think it can…
Are you able to tunnel ports other than 80 and 443 through Cloudflare?
I find it somewhat unclear how this works. Is it the JavaScript that loads comments on the posts, on the static site itself?
How will you handle the planned rewrite of Iceshrimp?
It’s not about that. It’s about targeting minorities, history they don’t like, etc.
Definitely a good way to do it. Photoprism supports uploading to WebDAV for sharing. Could front a CDN upload with a web dav server 🤔
Yeah, that sounds like a good idea. I am using photoprism for photo management. It doesn’t really support S3 or any CDN. You could use a fuse filesystem or something, but it’s very slow.
Where are you uploading galleries? Just your own HDD connected to a static website?
Word can in fact open odt files. It was added quite a long time ago. Don’t know how good the compatibility is, though
Don’t think the snap is an official Mozilla package.
WordPress is open source, for one.
The GPL explicitly allows selling the software, like a proprietary software product. You don’t even need to have the code up in a public repo. What you DO need to do, though, is provide a reasonable way for customers to get the source code, and send it to them if they ask. Just because a project is GPL doesn’t mean you’re entitled to the source for free. Of course, if someone buys it and requests the source, they can do whatever they want with it, including uploading it somewhere. Which in the end, essentially makes it available to everyone. Which is the whole point!
All of this only works if the owners of the code respect the license. In this particular case, I don’t believe a contributor agreement was ever created, so if the new owners want to close source the apps, they’ll have to get permission from all contributors, or drastically rewrite those contributions.
But again, this only matters if they respect the license in the first place…
I use Simple Login a lot too. But be careful, as some sites reject these email addresses. Or in the case of Shell Recharge, change their business logic to reject the email addresses without letting me change to another email … Haven’t been able to log in for months 🙃
I think they opened up the client, but not the server part. They also use some goofy license.
They’re not really open source, no. But they do at least support open standards.
They had opened sourced part of, but not all of it.
Organic Maps?
https://sh.itjust.works/c/localllama