I was searching for any native(non-proxied) YouTube client for Android in kotlin.
You can always turn off the proxying in LibreTube
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I was searching for any native(non-proxied) YouTube client for Android in kotlin.
You can always turn off the proxying in LibreTube
A good portion of Android itself is written in Java, and is not expected to get ported to Kotlin any time soon
Not using the Piped or Invidious API to proxy the video stream, since these tend to get blocked by YouTube really quickly
Tl;DR: Lemmy.ml, lemmygrad and hexbear are tankie shitholes. Stay away from them at all cost.
Probably the Steam Deck, since it lets you play both Java Edition and Bedrock Edition
they can subsidize EV manufacturing to the same degree
Meaning that we would either have to increase tax rates or borrow more money? Wow, what a great solution.
There’s also a more powerful version of it called SCEE
Violentmonkey is better anyway
Is there something similar in fish shell?
Currently, yes. But they are working on they’re own notification systems (probably something based on WebSocket, similar to what Signal does), hopefully it will also be compatible with UnifiedPush. There’s a feature request for this on the Proton user feedback tracker: https://protonmail.uservoice.com/forums/284483-proton-mail/suggestions/47423924-support-unifiedpush-for-android-notifications
The notifications themselves are still end-to-end encrypted though (from the Proton Mail notification server to the client on your phone), so Google, Apple or any other push notification provider can’t read them.
Hmm, that’s weird. It worked just fine for me. I even tried it with a file that I exported from Apple Wallet, it worked just fine in fWallet.
Oh I only thought about the .pkpass use case, as that’s what I’ve been using PassAndroid for, before I switched to fWallet.
Fuck spez
Is Desmos open source?
Could you elaborate? I don’t really see how a hardware attestation feature would take away any of your control? Android phones have had it for a long time, and even Google still allows you to install alternative operating systems on their Pixel phones. GrapheneOS even uses the hardware attestation feature to your benefit, by including the Auditor app, which you can use to verify the integrity of your device.
PipePipe has been around for quite some time, at least 2 years I believe