This is certainly interesting for those learning Japanese. I can't see myself going to Japan sometime in the future due to what's going on over there (mainly, the MyNumber program).
msokiovt
Mine is also old (iOS 15), so I can't get digital ID'd on that.
Yep, pretty much the plan here all along. It's bullspit if you ask me.
Not me, but my producer. We're both Java players, and we found some non-P2W servers (Modern Beta, Cherry Block, ModMix, and Gamer Dorks), but my producer was testing them out, and seeing how they worked after making an optimized modpack for himself (he absolutely loves playing modded Minecraft).
I think Proton has something like that as far as I'm aware. It's basic, though.
From a search on AlternativeTo, it looks to be the following, still active:
- OnlyOffice
- Proton Docs
- La Suite Docs
- Etherpad
- Fileverse
- Collabora
- Framapad
- Curvenote
- Airborn
- Univer (Spreadsheets)
- Documize
Hope this helps.
What version does this happen to be? It looks like 1.21.10 or 1.21.11.
Since my producer and I are using the Odin Project to potentially learn full-stack JS after the foundations course completion on our end (Rails is another option for full-stack development), we could certainly look into Tauri (even if we're not done with that yet). I wonder, however, why many apps don't use Tauri, and instead, Electron.
Is Tauri like Electron, or SQLite, but faster and FOSS? Are either of those what I'm getting at?
Not the developer, though that could be an option for sure. I'd highly recommend looking at the security holes for Flatpak, and it's got a ton of them. They're getting fixed, though I don't even have Flatpak installed on my machine.
Since this looks to be similar to Obsidian, why not name it something else like it, but without the Obsidian name?
I'll need to do some numerology on that....
EDIT: On the note of Obsidian, my producer and I use it all the time, however, there is another one that someone in a community I'm in looked at, that being Trilium Next. Judging by the looks, it's got similarities to Trilium, which is actually pretty nice.
Free Software I notice, which is always nice to see.