@gamer
Very true! I had to undergo major facial plastic surgery and change my legal name to escape them.
#Chromium (and #Chrome) begins phasing-out Manifest v2.
https://blog.chromium.org/2024/05/manifest-v2-phase-out-begins.html
This means, among other things, that uBlock Origin is about to be disabled in Chrome. Google will choose a different extension to recommend but it can not be as effective as #uBlock Origin.
Following #Google's example, may I instead recommend you switch to #Firefox.
Firefox will continue to support Manifest v2, and consequently uBlock Origin and other extensions that can not be implemented with Manifest v3.
Happy browsing.
@kirby @Inginsub
Another solution might be using sendmail adapter with msmtp — I've never used this setup myself, but check it out, might be easier to pull off than both: working with remote SMTP as is and setting up your own SMTP server to run locally. msmtp uses systemwide certs in /etc/ssl — so this shouldn't be a problem, you need a very basic .msmtprc: host, port, from, user — you can specify password right in it, or put it in .netrc
@kirby @Inginsub
Either that or find a way to supply up-to-date root certs to the Elixir module that is used to send emails — I'm not knowledgeable enough about it to help.
If you use Proton, this might work for you, this is what I use: https://github.com/emersion/hydroxide
It's easy to set up, but I'm not sure it's a good idea to run it on your VPS as it would have access to all your emails, at least make sure it accepts connections on localhost only.
@kirby @Inginsub
You can increase Pemorla's own log verbosity to debug and see what's going on.
I have hydroxide ProtonMail bridge thingie running locally, it works as SMTP server, I think I just pointed my Permombler to it, host port, login, password — and it worked, I didn't spend a lot of time on it.
But it might be tricky for remote SMTP server.
@mirabilos @mogwai @rl_dane
BTW when it comes to monochrome displays, I think there is an interesting development. This came up on Slashdot a few days ago: https://www.tomsguide.com/tablets/android-tablets/daylight-dc1-is-a-new-tablet-with-a-live-paper-display-that-might-be-better-than-e-ink-heres-how
Looks like they have made eink-like display responsive enough so it became possible to use it with regular GUI. This could be useful in a whole class of devices — something you could just work with texts on, for "small web", browsing Gemini and such.
@mirabilos @rl_dane @mogwai
Ha-ha-ha, and I even somewhat understand why they succeeded. I sometimes pick my (equally old) MacBook Pro, that has pre-Retina, but still higher pixel density panel, it's not running Mac OS X now, it has mostly the same Void linux/Wayland/Sway setup that I use on HP one, I look at the fonts and I'm like: "Wow, this looks good!"
They could "make it right" that is why it caught on — but I still think that with Retina display thing they went too far.
@rl_dane @mirabilos @mogwai
I feel conflicted about high pixel density displays — on one hand things indeed look better, no surprises here, on the other — I use an old HP ProBook that only has a 1366x768 12" panel, it's enough in most cases and I do appreciate longer battery life that isn't wasted on powering the high-resolution display even when I don't need that.
I can still connect it to an external display when I'm at home, so it's not like I'm missing something.
@theorytoe
Stop making up pick up lines and start making up drop off lines! 🤪
@sun @gabriel
Yes, it's not misinformation per se, but airing said dirty laundry selectively might've allowed to achieve for some interesting effects.
I think that Russia might have contributed greatly in getting you society this polarized, but at present the real scale of this contribution seems to be impossible to assess.
None
Just in case: DMs/PMs simply don't exist on this instance as concept — don't use them, use the other instance if you absolutely have to, or send an email to any address at m0xEE.Net or .Com or .Org, but I prefer keep most communication public.