It’s in the Silverblue FAQ: https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/fedora-silverblue/faq/#_how_can_i_play_more_videos_in_firefox_like_youtube
Admittedly, it does say you can use the flathub version.
It’s in the Silverblue FAQ: https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/fedora-silverblue/faq/#_how_can_i_play_more_videos_in_firefox_like_youtube
Admittedly, it does say you can use the flathub version.
Fedora Silverblue uses flatpaks for most apps by default. The exception is Firefox because the codes haven’t been sandboxed yet, but they are working on it. If you don’t need to play videos in Firefox, there is a flatpak available.
I realize Firefox is probably the biggest thing that really should be sandboxed, its why I haven’t switched to Silverblue yet.
The code for the first is there, its just on other branches, they seem to have a very unusual way of using git.
This first one has a QR code linking to its source: https://github.com/niilopoutanen/rss-feed
Unless I missed it, the second doesn’t claim to be open source. In any case this appears to be its source: https://github.com/maco2ou/finefeed
Disclaimer: I have not looked at how Lemmy calculates those numbers.
I suspect this is a combination of multiple factors:
This is my first Fediverse, unless XMPP counts, but I never used that across multiple instances.
I curious to see what happens with “duplicate” communities across instance, for example there are a number of “3D Printing” communities. Will one eventually become dominant and the others die off? Or what happens when the admins of one server decide not to continue running it? Will there be a way to migrate accounts and communities between servers?
I’ve been using Fedora with Cinnamon almost exclusively for more than 10 years.
Interesting, I wonder why Silverblue hasn’t switched yet. Or maybe the documentation is out of date.