Should be.
3.0.0 RC3 is already the version being used in the Trixie (Testing) repo, and there's a little under 30 days now to release the final version before the soft freeze next month.
Should be.
3.0.0 RC3 is already the version being used in the Trixie (Testing) repo, and there's a little under 30 days now to release the final version before the soft freeze next month.
I also love SpaceHey. I made my profile to be Tina Horse Girl infauated with BUTTS from Bob's Burgers.
I kind of miss when MySpace was essentially the least terrible social network we had.
It had a myriad of problems inherent in social networks (some extremely serious), but it was a veritable paradise compared to the pure anger and outrage that fills social media these days.
By default, LibreWolf disables Widevine and the Cisco OpenH264 library plugins, but you can easily enable them in the settings.
Some Linux distros also don't enable those plugins in their native Firefox builds (I believe Fedora is one example, but my info may be outdated), though they can usually be enabled manually without much issue (might need to download a couple of extra packages, not certain).
So it depends on the distro and build.
On Windows, that isn't an issue, though. At least not for vanilla Firefox and pretty much all Chromium browsers.
Safari on MacOS has its own DRM. Not quite sure how it's implemented on sites that use Widevine (Netflix) because they still work, but Safari doesn't use Widevine at all (except on iOS for some reason).
I'm glad I live somewhere that's never had daylight savings. The concept still perplexes me.
I've been having fun with comics again. It's been way too long since I've spent several hours a day reading them. Unfortunately, it appears my fatigue doesn't like that too much, so there are many breaks necessary, otherwise I burn out.
Still, it's nice.
After a two-ish week break, I'm playing Marvel Rivals again. Completely disabling all chat (mainly text because I've always disabled voice anyway) does wonders. (The fact that I never had to disable text chat on Overwatch perplexes me. Even when it went F2P, I didn't have to deal with half the shit I see in MR.)
I don't play comp, so it doesn't really matter much.
Might start up Reviver or The Operator later. Loved both demos when I played them a while ago, so I think I'll enjoy those.
I know you only want software from the official repos, but it's really simple to add the LibreWolf repo and use that.
Other than that, there's not really much in the way of Firefox forks in the official repos. I believe the Debian builds have their own configurations as well, but I'm not certain. You could use other browsers (Falkon, GNOME Web, etc.), but they're severely lacking in features.
Off-topic, LibreWolf uses the extrepo
package to add their repo which is a great third party repo management program for Debian. It's curated by maintainers of official Debian packages and has selection of other third party repos for some popular software that either doesn't make it into the official repos for whatever reason or aren't kept super updated in Debian Stable.
That and it's so much easier than adding signing keys, messing with sources lists, etc. I wish more software used it, honestly, but the maintainers know what they're doing.
What do you mean? Firefox alternatives in Debian/Debian-based repos? Or just an alternative for apt
in general (in which case, I think you've replied to the wrong post)?
I mean, the Z-A previews definitely showed a similar art style, but the battling gameplay is completely new. Dodging out of rollout looks great.
If it's in Lumiose, I really hope the "you're not the one" hex maniac girl is back and they actually resolve that plot thread. I doubt it, but who knows.
If you ever want Emerald with some quality of life improvements (e.g. HMs not being necessary to actually teach; you can use them in the overworld as long as anyone in your party can learn whichever move), I'd highly suggest the Emerald Seaglass ROM hack.
I'm mainly bringing it up because the art is absolutely gorgeous. So if you ever want to dive into Emerald again, give it a shot.
You can play it on a variety of GBA emulators, so it's pretty simple to get running. A few good Android ones, I believe there's one called Delta on iOS, and there are several for most desktop OSes (included Linux).
Comics... Equally enjoyable as they are frustrating (crossovers and reading orders make things unnecessarily complicated).
Other than that, pain and fatigue. Didn't want this year to be like last year, but it seems many appointments are on the horizon.