You just became an ad for mullvad…
You just became an ad for mullvad…
I made the jump about 2 months ago for the same reasons you’re considering. My job also being very similar in usage to yours. Literally 0 issues so far, couldn’t be more satisfied that I made the jump. I went with mint and there was basically zero learning curve for me coming from w10.
Do it.
Donated! Keep up the good work
I don’t disagree that they should make some money for their efforts, but isn’t every client for lemmy made by a single developer?
I’m android and went through about 1 month of switching between clients to find the one I liked the most. Connect was the winner for me. Multiple accounts, hide read, good default UI amongst a handful of other things
Well, let’s do some quick math. Let’s count billable hours in a day with a minimum billable hour being 1 hour. If you work a 6 hour work day, and can complete the average task in 15 minutes, that works out to 24 possible billable hours in one day accounting for a total of 90 minutes of actual work.
So yeah, on paper it’s actually really easy to “work” 100 hours per week
It’s Connect. I’ve got 6 apps for lemmy currently installed, going back and forth as they continue to update versions, and Connect continues to be my favorite
My reddit app has always been baconreader. My favorite feature, and the reason I’ve stuck with them for almost a decade is their slideshow view. Basically an infinite side scroll of consecutive posts in whatever sub you’re in. Would love to see that feature and would be happy to beta
Good question, I’m not really sure tbh
It’s a plumeria tree actually. I have another one in white also
They seem to sprout about once a year or so. I have a few so it’s hard to keep track
Third party apps made reddit what it is. There was no official app when I joined, and without baconreader I probably would never have become a daily user. Then they launch a piece of shit official app that is clearly only designed to separate it’s users from their money. No mod tools, no ADA support, etc. Unfortunately they will survive, but it’ll go the way of Facebook or Twitter or any other social media app that went corporate and become a shell of it’s former self.
So reddit would rather pay hundreds, if not thousands of employees to moderate the site? Seems like a great business decision
I think it’s now overstated how “different” Linux is. I switched to Mint about a year ago and there is basically zero learning curve right out the box.