

F-Droid has a copy of the source code I assume.


F-Droid has a copy of the source code I assume.


Personally, I never open anything from the “X” platform. Using a platform that belongs to a person that makes Nazi salutes is unacceptable for my standards.
I don’t really know, but I support you in your search!


TL&DR; PinePhone. Longer explanation below
I’ll prepare for sacrifices. I should not blame the Open-Source alternatives that they’re not on par with Android yet. It was Android’s decision to become more closed, and I’ll keep remembering it.
I’ll start using my PinePhone that I already own anyway. I’ve used it for a while, but there was less push for me to use back then. Without F-Droid, I’ll press myself hard to adapt to PinePhone and will just stay there until it improves. I have 1-2 decades of experience of using non-mainstream software and see it improve with time. I’ll learn. I’ll adapt.


It doesn’t look too bad on the video actually, check it out. (See the post’s EDIT, I messed it up at first.)
Depends a lot on your phone size, hand size etc though, I guess. Generally very small keyboards CAN be ergonomic, as far as I’ve heard (also from people with literally diagnosed RSI). How this one objectively fares IDK


Apologies for me not understanding Lemmy editing rules and removing the URL (see the post’s EDIT). The awesome/crazy experimentation is not mine sadly, it’s here: https://www.reddit.com/r/ErgoMobileComputers/comments/1npnj85/btyp_a_mini_pg1316m_switch_keyboard_for_use_on_a/


Sorry about that! See the edit to the post, the URL is https://www.reddit.com/r/ErgoMobileComputers/comments/1npnj85/btyp_a_mini_pg1316m_switch_keyboard_for_use_on_a/


None, just use layers. There are 4 keys with a frequency of 0.15% or lower: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Letter_frequency For a text of 1000 symbols, on average, that would be less than 5 of those characters total.
That being said, the requirements for your muscle memory increases, yes.
For those that don’t know what Layers are - please google the concept yourself; if I try to write it spontaneously in my own words, the result will be subpar.

Based on the comments so far, maybe something like this makes sense:
Warning: Private messages in Lemmy are not End-to-End encrypted, so the respective instance owners are technically able to read them. Please use a platform with E2E encryption for private messaging. Lemmy recommends Element.io and XMPP.

I agree. That’s why I propose to clarify the wording.

Yes. And I think saying “messages in Lemmy are not End-to-End encrypted” is clearer communication than “messages in Lemmy are not secure”.
I wanna use JXL locally. It’s quite amazing technologically, you can losslessly compress a JPEG to 0.8 or so of the original size.
I compress my photos for long-term storage anyway, so why not do it with JXL.
Thanks for the app recommendation!
(Fossify is a fork of the discontinued SimpleMobileTools.)
Personally, I’ve found Fossify Gallery so far: https://f-droid.org/packages/org.fossify.gallery/ Tried it out, it works well. Any other recommendations would be nice, too.
Signal, for example, does not support JXL as of today. But saving the photo and opening in Fossify Gallery works.


I think a more fair name should be OnlyOffice. Wrapped in CryptPad for privacy and encryption. I’d also note a level of controversy around OnlyOffice, it being (still) developed in Russia, not making “we support Ukraine” / “we condemn the war” statements. There’s a bit more of that not just about the war, too.
And also to be fair, the product itself is visually quite decent, especially if you’re looking for online collaboration.
“Hope for the best, prepare for the worst” huh?