Many things still don't have a XDG portal like reading absolute cursor position (useful for some accessibility and productivity apps) and things who do have an XDG portal like screenshoting are usually not implemented in popular OS-agnostic libraries
Those things aren't supported in XWayland either for security reasons iirc and require X11 but I could be wrong
The origin of the maid dresses is actually kinda neat iirc! Japan is obsessed by medieval western nobility so they ended up opening nobility-themed cafés with maids and butlers (but mostly maids) which became insanely popular. So much so that many artistic medias including animes started integrating maids and butlers (but mostly maids) inside their stories.
Basically, it's kinda like us with ninjas and samurais afaik.
For the bunny ears? Maybe a fetish thing idk. Probably related to the japanese culture of adoring anything cute. Bunny = small animal => cute => popular. Dunno why. Maybe I'm wrong tho.
EDIT: Not medival. I'm misremembering history (see below)
Interesting! To me inverting the x-axis just makes sense in 3rd person games: you see the back of the head of the character so if the back of the head moves to the left your field of view should move to the right. Basically, the joystick controls the head of the character from your POV. Never thought that was uncommon!
GameCube controllers controlled the camera by using buttons and not two thumbsticks
Played a bit of GameCube a few months ago and that's definitely wrong --- the c-stick isn't great but it's very much used for camera controls --- however the rest of the article seems pretty good. Thanks for sharing!
Oracle got the trademark for JavaScript because they bought the company who made it. Now they have no involvement in the JavaScript ecosystem aside from making a library that barely anyone is using. The JavaScript standard has to refer to JavaScript as ECMAScript because Oracle doesn't want anything to do with it and won't allow other people to use the JavaScript name.
The Node.JS/Done guy says that's stupid and had been requesting Oracle to release the trademark into the public domain for years which Oracle had always ignored/refused. More recently, Node.JS/Deno guy took Oracle to court for holding onto the JavaScript copyright with no intention of doing anything with it which ended in failure with Oracle claiming they're involved in the ecosystem thanks to that one library they made.
The guy who created JavaScript agrees that's stupid but can't help.
I've tried both and ~/.local/bin tends to be used by a bunch of tools to install their own binaries/scripts so depending on what you use it can become very messy (which did happen in my case). I used to have a ~/Documents/Scripts directory in my $PATH and that was much cleaner than my current setup so that's what I'd recommend, especially if you want to use Git with it! :)
Sometimes it's plug-n-play and everything works great. Sometimes you press the update Nvidia drivers button on your Ubuntu work computer and then need to tell IT you bricked your OS. YMMV
In my experience Broadcom on Linux is a bad omen, second only to Nvidia. If you can, I'd recommend switching your Wi-Fi card for one that has better Linux support (e.g. "TP-Link Archer TX3000E" or anything that uses an Intel chip inside really since support for them is handled directly by Intel and integrated into Linux's source code). Good luck! :)
Make sure that your device is not 'rooted'. If the operating system is an Android variant (also called a 'custom ROM'), such as LineageOS or Pixel Experience, then the wero app can’t be installed for security reasons.
I can't use it but it looks neat! I hope these companies will one day realise that requiring the user's device to be an opaque jail controlled by a usually foreign third-party isn't good security practice :/
Shit like this is why people go back and play much older titles and have a great time with them
"People" as in maybe 5% of players
That's the part of the comment I was referring to. It's factually wrong: only ~15% of playtime is spent on 2024 games
LoL didn't release in 2024, neither did Warframe. I'm not arguing that old service games don't make the most revenue, they obviously do, I'm arguing that a lot of the live service games that are actively comming out are almost all underperforming and failing to get any kind of audience. All that means there's very little incentive to develop a new live service game unless you already have a big community for it or a brilliant idea
47% of the total playing time on Steam was spent on games released in the last one to seven years, while a sizeable 37% of time was spent in games that have been out for eight years or more.
The server might always send a modified script that just uploads the plaintext private key.
Yeah, you'd need a way to validate the client code before it's executed to solve that issue
Section "2. Client application security" of MEGA's Security Whitepaper discusses this exact problem. Their best solution to that issue is to just cram the whole frontend in a signed web extension and not serve any code to the user when the extension is active, which is not very user friendly but works for those who want an extra layer of protection
I just can't find a good user-friendly implementation, sorry for not being of more help. The web just isn't E2EE-friendly ig :/
Yeah, I'm not used to E2EE in the browser either and StackExchange seems to agree that there's no nice solution :/
The sanest option in terms of user practicality to me appears to be storing the private key on the server, maybe encrypted with the user's password, and sending it to the user on successful login where it would be decrypted client side. It seems like it's more or less what MEGA is doing since they have a similar issue
If the server having temporary access to the user's password is an issue maybe the password could be partially pre-hashed before being sent?
It's be interesting to talk about it with someone with more experience, especially since implementing all of that will be a pain so it can't be redone every Thursday
I know Matrix has E2EE with some public documentation on its implementation. Maybe it could help you? Idk how familiar you're with E2EE or what kind of implementation you'd want, anything will have drawbacks :/
Nothing forbids sharing US news in this community. Anything interesting on the globe goes afaik :)
Also while many countries don't have inequality issues in the "highly privatised health care" industry, I genuinely can't name a single country without inequality issues and Luigi's story may be inspirational to some of these ppl facing inequalities so imo it's good to see it shared here!
Eh-e eh!