Soon it will be possible to run browsers on iOS that are not using Webkit. That is a big deal.
Apple is trying to frame it as dangerous.
Sadly it will only possible to run those browsers in the EU and browser makers need then to provide different browsers in the EU and outside. This requires more resources, which makes it harder for smaller developers.
Apple also wants developers to pay for the right to provide downloads from other app stores, which now become possible in the EU, and directly.
IMHO every user on an iPhone, as well as on any other device, should be allowed to run the browser of their choice!
So as part of the Reddit AMA, I got questions about which browser I would use if I did not use @Vivaldi. The point is that the reason for building Vivaldi in the first place, after already having built Opera, was that there was no browser like Vivaldi out there!
What other browsers have: - Single key keyboard shortcuts. - Mouse gestures. - Work spaces, tab stacks and tab tiles. - Web panels. - Quick commands. - Custom themes, including custom buttons. - Mail client, calendar and feed reader.
This is just to name a few items and for me those things are not optional.
Similarly I would not like to use a browser that does user profiling, including locally, and crypto. I would also not like to use a browser from a company that is also an ad company. These things are for me not negotiable.
Czy możecie polecić jakiś program do zdalnej kontroli telefonu z androidem? Warunek. Serwer musi byc mozliwie malo wymagajacy (osoba nietechniczna musi umiec go wlaczyc i wylaczyc), a klient musi dzialac na linuksie i najlepiej na androidzie. Od biedy, Windows takze wchodzi w gre.. Musi byc mozliwosc wykonywania wszystkich operacji. Idealnie jakby to bylo cos open source, ale cos free takze moze byc.
Obecnie chce ustawic vpn, wiec aplikacje nie musza wymagac dostepu do Internetu.
If you want to be able to have your application downloaded through other means than the app store, you have to pay apple 50c pr install over 1 million yearly.
I would think this is in violation of the DMA, but kind of sounds like Apple does not care.
#myfirstdistro was #Slackware in 96 or 97. I was going to school for CS, and even thought I bought a C compiler for my Amiga, it was too different to use for school assignments. A classmate introduced me to the idea of trying #Linux . I picked up Slackware because it sounded neat. It took me 3-4 days to get #Xwindow working on a Compaq laptop, but I got it working, and that was the start of my long journey with Linux. Slackware teaches you a lot about how Linux works.