05c9cf37854b6cdcfeeddff6d7f849e46d949f915fcc1931fcf2ce66303d47c553
It doesn’t seem like there’s any enforcement method, just “social influence”.
In other words, they made a scoreboard.
Annas archive exists
I almost thought you were that bot that changes youtube links to invidious ones, lol.
Yeah, those tend to be good (well, tux.pizza is a bit of an exception, it shows the error that the others fixed). It’s a little annoying that a lot of the invidious instances that work won’t show up when you do the “switch instance” thing on an instance that doesn’t work, but it makes a bit of sense, not wanting to get overwhelmed, or trying to not get too noticed.
Yeah, youtube breaks things all too frequently, and a lot of the time these projects can’t push out updates fast enough. A lot of invidious instances sadly don’t work (as of the last time I checked them, a few days ago), but a few usually work because they merge patches before upstream does. inv[dot]nadeko[dot]net comes to mind.
Are her screeds deranged? Yeah. Are they interesting to read? Also yeah.
“We regret to inform you that, as of July 26, 2024, all Homeworkify services are permanently unavailable.”
oh, neat
Nebula, the overlay network thing. It connects all of my servers together, and me to my servers.
Most of these problems are literally just capitalism. This solution is just a band aid, and even then is unlikely to be implemented in a way that will help the problem.
DT coping and malding. (DistroTube made a video about how systrays are useless)
Good thing I’ve been using LibRedirect with Invidious and Piped for a while now. YouTube really has been going downhill.
Patches for the kernel that make the camera work exist, even though they haven’t been accepted into the kernel you could just compile it yourself. Maybe I’m not the best resource though, I hard bricked my 6T two days ago. Ubuntu Touch is also an option, it has camera support because it uses an older more custom kernel.
At least the prognosis is good.
There are a number of companies that would be affected by the license change, and they are the largest driving force behind the fork. Hashicorp’s managed option just really sucks. There might be fragmentation, but I expect most people to switch to the project with more engineers, Linux foundation backing, and an actually open source license.
Some people might have also clicked on a little bear.