I can confirm that Hyprland also works from GDM
This might sound a bit heretical, but you could carefully pick and match a variety of software and configuration to your individual needs, turning your tiling wm into a fully functional desktop environment, or you could just install a tiling wm into an existing desktop environment and get something useful with like ten percent of the work.
I know that I have done the former multiple times, only to fall back to existing desktop environments again because it’s just a lot less work and often works better, since you don’t have to take care of getting things like screen sharing or media buttons to function.
Especially LXQt and Xfce make it very easy to run a tiling window manager, but you can also find extensions/plugins for KDE or Gnome to make them tile. I’m personally running Gnome with the Pop Shell extension right now
Also the Apple Pippin. And third-party Macintosh clones. And the Twentieth Century Macintosh. And the Apple III.
Especially before Steve Jobs took over Apple again they had what feels like more flops than successes.
It gets even worse when a number of anime aren’t even licensed for your country so you can only stream them via VPN. Looking at you Crunchyroll
If I could actually get those for 1000$ I would do that. Just spent 260€ for a new 16tb one…
Yeah, I’m still stuck on Google Keep, since it’s the only one that’s integrated with the (even worse) Google home
And for the love of god don’t go for latest, just stick to the release tags
Might want to rethink the name Redox OS already exists and is a pretty active project to create a modern OS in Rust
Yeah, as I said, I had Radarr organize the movies like this “Moviename (Year)/Moviename (Year) - Quality.mp4”. It looks like this with the tree command:
/data/Filme
├── 2001 A Space Odyssey (1968)
│ ├── 2001 A Space Odyssey (1968) - Bluray-1080p.de.srt
│ ├── 2001 A Space Odyssey (1968) - Bluray-1080p.fr.srt
│ ├── 2001 A Space Odyssey (1968) - Bluray-1080p.mkv
│ ├── 2001 A Space Odyssey (1968) - Bluray-1080p.zh.srt
│ ├── fanart.jpg
│ ├── logo.png
│ └── poster.jpg
├── 23 (1998)
│ └── 23 (1998) - Bluray-480p.mkv
├── 300 (2006)
│ ├── 300 (2006) - Bluray-1080p.de.srt
│ ├── 300 (2006) - Bluray-1080p.en.srt
│ ├── 300 (2006) - Bluray-1080p.fr.srt
│ ├── 300 (2006) - Bluray-1080p.mkv
│ ├── 300 (2006) - Bluray-1080p.zh.srt
│ ├── fanart.jpg
│ └── poster.jpg
├── 3 Idiots (2009)
│ ├── 3 Idiots (2009) - Bluray-1080p.de.srt
│ ├── 3 Idiots (2009) - Bluray-1080p.mkv
│ ├── 3 Idiots (2009) - Bluray-1080p.sub
│ ├── 3 Idiots (2009) - Bluray-1080p.zh.srt
│ ├── fanart.jpg
│ └── poster.jpg
I can also watch the movies, its just a pain to find them
I’ve looked it up and it’s even uglier and I can kinda understand why they did it this way Basically, for their “integrations” they aren’t using any official APIs. Instead they just use the websites and automate them via the Playwright framework. So for each user they have a VM running with a Chrome browser to access the services. So now they have the problem that they need to get their users session cookies into the browser. And the easiest solution for that is having the users access their VM via VNC and just log into the automated browser.
This is such a hacky solution that I’m actually in awe of it’s shittiness. That’s something you throw together in an all-nighter during a Hackathon, not a production ready solution