@Toxic_Flange
Is this the show about all-girl team running a game dev studio?
@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! 🤪
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.