I would rather see people use Firefox than Vivaldi. We need a more diverse browser engine market to keep the web open. More here: https://better-tech.eu/web/article/switch-browsers/
We need a more diverse browser engine market to keep the web open.
We definitely do, but it’s a tall order considering making a fully functional and daily usable browser engine is one of the most difficult programming projects to under take
At least we got Ladybird with its brand new from scratch engine coming up though! (In 2028…)
It’s absolutely not a simple thing, but if we let the web turn into Chrome-only then Ladybird doesn’t stand a chance. For now, more market share for Firefox and Firefox-based browsers is the only argument against making websites only work in Chrome.
OP writes “instead of their american counterparts”, and then puts signal.
Firefox as well any opensource doesn’t have a country. You can build it and use it. Avoid any centralized service.
The 4 freedoms of software are:
Freedom 0: The Freedom to Run You can use the software for any purpose, without restrictions. Freedom 1: The Freedom to Study and Modify You have access to the source code, allowing you to study how the software works and make changes to suit your needs. Freedom 2: The Freedom to Distribute Copies You can share copies of the software with others, whether for free or at a cost. Freedom 3: The Freedom to Improve and Share Improvements You can modify the software and share your changes with the community, helping others benefit from your improvements.as long as these freedoms are observed it doesn’t matter the country of origin.
Signal is based in California, but they’re a nonprofit.
Not sure it’s a good idea to recommend Arch Linux to newbies migrating from Windows; maybe prioritize Mint or similar?
this is not a recommendation post. this is what i personally use as i said in the title. i would always recommend Mint to a Linux beginner
Not very beginner friendly to recommend Arch instead of Mint or Zorin.
He said “things I personally use”
Some of these products would not exist without their American counterpart, which directly fuel their existance.
Librewolf is just a hardened version of Firefox. It would not exist without the Firefox team continuing to develop Firefox and to fix its security issues.
Ecosia primarely uses Bing and Startpage uses Google for search results. Both would not exist without the search engines backing them.
I’m not saying these are bad products and I don’t mean to criticiseze. I’m actually a librewolf user myself. I just think it is important to point out that the European label might be deceiving in this instance and might mislead people into thinking they are using something different than they actually are.
It might also not be so important. Perhaps focusing our energy on good open source projects and NGO-backed initiatives is desirable regardless of their origin?
idk food for thought
Ecosia is actively developing their own search index together with Qwant. They are rolling out French and German results this year actually. AFAIK only like Mojeek and like Swisscow have their own search index (as well as Brave which is US based). But their current search results aren’t really that great which is why I will stick to Qwant.
I also don’t fully trust Brave because of their whole crypto involvement but their search engine is pretty good from experience and definitely much better in terms of privacy than google.
Arch isn’t european though, it’s canadian.
The Canadian who started it has long since retired from the project. A lot of the current developers live in Germany.
I switched from chatgpt pro to lechat and have been using lechat for several weeks now.
It’s so bad comparitively that I am considering to just not use AI anymore.
I used chatgpt daily many times and minstral le chat is just… Incapable of understanding contextual things. It has still a long way to go before it can really compete, sadly.
It’s so bad comparitively that I am considering to just not use AI anymore.
This is the way.
How can you tell someone is a Linux user? They will tell you, vocally, unprompted, and often with an infographic.
I’m dissapointed…No snappy remark on our command line usage /s
Is that how you communicate with us humans?
Is: command not found







