Vivaldi is a good Chrome replacement.
Vivaldi is a good Chrome replacement.
Don’t even need an app. I got an eSIM via a QR code (which went to a website where the eSIM was downloaded). This was on a Pixel 6. I guess the process may be different on other phones.
“an all-in-one subscription that bundled together your choice of Pixel phone, Preferred Care protection, Google One cloud storage, YouTube Premium, Google Play Pass, and (optionally) Fi Wireless service.”
From https://9to5google.com/2023/08/29/google-pixel-pass-ends/
Started at $55. Shame it never launched in the UK (or elsewhere)
You can’t (yet) post with sync, only view and comment.
Back in my uni days (1997-01) my uni ran its own Usenet server. Don’t think it carried the alt.binaries, but did have groups specifically for the uni. Sadly only a small handful of people used it.
It’s the same on the Reddit Android app too (although the icon option in the app looks ok, the icon in the launcher is pixelated)
Obligatory Tom Scott video https://youtu.be/UEfP1OKKz_Q
Fantasia, not specifically the Night on bald mountain section, but the bits with the orchestra.
Also a TV series in the UK called Mealstrom. The paintings would come to life, which was ok but the intro was creepy AF https://youtu.be/_FwP5LAXd7U
Fantasia, not specifically the Night on bald mountain section, but the bits with the orchestra.
Also a TV series in the UK called Mealstrom. The paintings would come to life, which was ok but the intro was creepy AF https://youtu.be/_FwP5LAXd7U
Newsblur is pretty decent, and has (or atleast used to - I’ve not checked) have a free version (likely limited in number of feeds). I pay and is $36 a year.
You can organise feeds from various sites into folders - clicking the folder will give a view that combines the different feeds into one.
Android app is pretty decent too.
Please tell me you’re not meaning the 1980s animated classic - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0084701/?ref_=ext_shr
Open it, leave a sticky post saying you’ve moved to Lemmy. Do basic moderation to keep the admins from removing you.
So? There is no way for the vast majority of users to read or understand the source for something like Firefox - to the point it may as well be closed source. Agreed of course plenty of security researchers will be examining the code which they can’t with Vivaldi - but presumably if that was a security advantage Firefox would have less vulnerabilities when compared to other browsers. (Actually would be interested to see if this is the case!)