my favourite is Amazon’s:
- buy without prime (2$ shipping fees)
- buy with prime (free shipping)
exept you must pay amazon prime 10$ and it’s a monthly recuring subscription.
Also on Mastodon: @pedroapero@mastodon.top
Want to send me a tip? XMR:89oiUKyACFZ655sTikh42RF8wpd46EQDmbTQUQiHHRWFEatjp5xxj4tZBhMMfjC4X45qvq4EdEGXkBsdxT1kP9xyVia8mPD
my favourite is Amazon’s:
exept you must pay amazon prime 10$ and it’s a monthly recuring subscription.
I use Gthumb for simple edits (croping, resizing, rotating…).
Every Door
thank you for sharing, definitely the easiest for Android from my research :-)
Note: there is a comparison of editor apps here: https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Comparison_of_editors
The feature looks made ugly on purpose though (compared to organic maps where you can just download the whole country or select more precisely what you want)
the Android VLC is absolutely different from the desktop version.
Hi, thanks a lot, I’ll sure try them both!
Although it’ not sharing “sources” and it is only a specific genre of nusic, you can find a lot of content on Ektoplazm too: https://ektoplazm.com
You can’t be serious. Being able to fix anything is the raison d’etre of open source.
Unfortunately, google maps is much more than a map. Shops with ratings and business hours, traffic, public transports, sattelite and street views are typically missing from these alternatives (fair rating is likely impossible).
I like Organic Maps though in case if network issues. Hopes Kartaview succeeds too.
All your session cookies are stored in plaintext.
63.3K commits from 1K+ contributors and still pre-alpha, it’s amazing what a nightmare web browsers have become!
Sounds to me that it would have been easier to create a web-based client for an existing messaging system with such features (like Briar).
It seems to me that there will be much less relays than there are AP nodes. Users won’t publish/subscribe to hundred of relays (if they did, relays would not scale). Hence more bad content to less moderators, and poor moderation.
Adding client filters would just shift the censorship power to those maintaining them.
Checkout the list of recommendations published by the Free Software Foundation: https://www.fsf.org/resources/webmail-systems
I would add:
I am doing 5-10$ rounds of donations (4-10 projects each generally) to my favourite projects too on a regular basis. I favor XMR transactions as is it largely accepted those days and fees are appropriate for such low amounts.