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I found the Flatpak significantly easier than any other method. The only thing I had to do was set it to run when the computer boots up to save a click.
I found the Flatpak significantly easier than any other method. The only thing I had to do was set it to run when the computer boots up to save a click.
I highly recommend configuring qBittorrent to only connect to the VPN interface, so if your VPN is off it will simply not connect to the internet at all.
That doesn’t work for the workflow of sending articles to my Kindle with a bookmarklet.
I have a Kindle. It does not support EPUB. This does affect me. I used to use a bookmarklet to send articles to my Kindle, and this would make that unfeasible.
Some of us still use devices that only support .mobi
That’s where I stopped. It was a perfect miniseries. I saw there was going to be a second season and I just rolled my eyes and resolved not to watch it. The first season ended perfectly to me.
The joke is that it contains the letter E, which is banned on the instance.
It was off by default. Hardly “confusing.”
What is broken that it needs to be updated to fix? I use it every day and it works fine.
Sadly, it is. It didn’t get any updates for years at one point, too.
Someone has been defacing OpenStreetMap with stuff like this for months as well. It’s pretty sad.
DC 10. You roll a natural 1, it modifies to 15. CRITICAL FAILURE
I feel like it’s a bit ridiculous. A professional with expertise doing the worst they possibly can shouldn’t be the same as any random untrained person doing the worst they can.
I’ve owned both an X220T and a first generation Yoga. Each has different pen technology, but both worked out of the box on all apps on Linux.
Rnote is a good app for handwritten notes on Linux. Xournal++ used to be the one recommended, but the UI is not great. I still use it occasionally to mark-up PDFs, since I don’t think Rnote is quite there on that feature yet.
Nothing quite compares to OneNote for organizing notes, however, since it has built-in OCR and you can search your handwritten notes. Unfortunately, there is no Linux implementation of it that supports inking. I’ve seen people say that OneNote 2010 works through WINE, but I couldn’t get it running. I also tried an Android emulator to use the Android version, but it didn’t work with my high DPI display and crashed a lot.
My Note 4 died last year so I don’t have any android suggestions, sorry. On Linux I like Rnote, but it’s fairly early in development and I last time I wanted to annotate a PDF I had to do so in Xournal++
Consider dropping your built-in sync requirement, and use Syncthing instead. It opens up your options.
Install Stylus > Write New Style > Import and then copy/paste this in. Keep in mind that I removed a lot of my specific tweaks for sites I use, because that’s PII. You will encounter many more weird issues on random sites than you do with DarkReader, but if you’re used to working with userCSS you’ll probably have no issues fixing those. The way this essentially works is by inverting your entire browser screen, then rotating the hue so the colours of website themes aren’t weird, then it inverts images back to normal. I’m sure there is a way to do this without inverting the images in the first place, but it would involve one hell of a lot more code than this. I wrote this originally in about 3 minutes.
html, iframe {
filter: invert(1) hue-rotate(180deg);
}
img, div[background-image], div[style*="background-image"], video {
filter: invert(1) hue-rotate(180deg);
}
@-moz-document domain("lemmy.ml"), domain("ultimate-guitar.com"), domain("open.spotify.com"), domain("discord.com"), domain("localhost") {
/* Exemptions for sites that already have a dark mode */
html, iframe {
filter: none;
}
img, div[background-image], div[style*="background-image"], video {
filter: none;
}
}
@-moz-document domain("youtube.com") {
#movie_player {
filter: invert(1) hue-rotate(180deg);
}
video {
filter: none;
}
}
@-moz-document url-prefix("https://www.google.com/maps") {
div[aria-label="Street View"] canvas, div[aria-label="Photo"] canvas, button[data-photo-index] {
filter: invert(1) hue-rotate(180deg);
}
div[role="img"] {
filter: none;
}
}
I made my own with Stylus. At its simplest it’s 2 lines of CSS which pales in comparison to what Dark Reader is going with, and then I have one section for exempted websites, and two sections for websites I use a lot that needed specific small fixes. It uses basically no resources, and doesn’t slow anything down.
The one downside is that because it uses CSS filters, some colors become less brilliant. This is a known flaw with how CSS calculates colors for hue-rotate
.
Pasted in a comment below.
I haven’t run into anything. It works the same as it did when I installed it manually on my last OS.