maybe because a huge fraction of users wouldn’t understand more advanced tutorials, or it’d be just too much effort
maybe because a huge fraction of users wouldn’t understand more advanced tutorials, or it’d be just too much effort
maybe thats related to your ad blocker(s) lol
trying to execute that requires the caller (so user shell
from using adb most likely) to have the same uid as Google Play which should never be the case
afair
jokes on you one of my not so much into linux friends had it and his setup kept breaking, now he’s about to install fedora
non-reply reply lol
crunchy but old snack
sometime ago I had my home directory managed by systemd-homed
on Fedora (before 38 even afaik). the SELinux policy wasn’t configured properly for it though, so I had to keep setting it to permissive mode. for some stupid reason I remember running the command to do that on every. single. boot. lol
yet another reason to use sd-boot?
actually normal business for Google Play and smaller apps
OTOH, that dialog looks horrible. Who designed that? Are all Xbox dialogs like that?
anyone know how intel’s microcode update policy is in comparison to AMD’s?
same for PowerToys somehow. how the hell is it that slow in installing updates?
wow I kept opening man:somethingwithoutsectionunfortunately
in firefox instead of doing that lol
No one with Cascadia Code?
So is it pretty much an unofficial Spin then?
maybe it’s a good thing these blind haters of anime stuff aren’t nearby
To 1.: dri
instead of all
would handle hardware-accelerated rendering. Then some webcams or controllers won’t be accessible though. This one’s a bit complicated, since the necessary portals for e.g. generic USB device access aren’t yet there.
To 2.: portals should be used instead of that. Using them doesn’t require these permissions.
To 3.: click on details and see. This is Flathub making it easy to understand for users.
Permissions should make clear whatever dangerous things an app can do. If not, why do all this effort of isolation? Firefox could delete everything in downloads, either by accident on Mozilla’s side, or a privilege escalation. If the app used portals instead, it couldn’t, at least without user interaction. Or a browser security vulnerability could open up any USB devices to webpages. It’s all about what could happen with granted permissions. And these can 100 % be fixed in at least some way.
Apps could start improving to remove the warnings…
Well you do you. I don’t see the point in hating open source software made by them, you’re not paying them unlike with regular products and boycotting them.
There’s also a still in-development rival for GNOME, Valent. And it’s a native program and not just a shell extension. I prefer it, and maybe it even has more features.