Arch user btw.
As I understood, it’s kind of an isolated fork of the internet (not the protocols but more surface-level stuff) with some changes. Considering how bloated and bad internet is nowadays, I guess it serves the purpose of being a niche alternative. I can’t really understand the actual features and differences of it though so someone else will have to take a look into that.
It looks like it’s based on Epiphany?
Removed by mod
I agree with this. However the very latest Pixels (with the stock ROM) might be a bit more invasive than the phones by an OEM like Motorola or Nokia.
Not really. A smartphone with a privacy-respecting OS and E2EE communication apps only is more secure. Though you can argue that it’s not really a phone if you don’t use the soter service.
Removed by mod
Removed by mod
It’s not just about privacy. In this case it’s also about law evasion and possible hiding assistance.
Still the governments are so crazy now it can trigger them.
Why?
I think it’s obvious.
Can you ban FOSS apps nowadays?
Yes especially if it’s Australia.
Because that could easily make OSM banned in most countries?
Breezy is probably the most mainstream rn.
Well since its design is pretty uncommon, a widget of the same style would look out of place on almost any setup.
That’s true but absolutely impossible to achieve.
No matter which model is adopted, the prime minister has said privacy protections will be introduced to cover any data people end up providing.
Sure. Now stop thinking of ridiculous legal aspects and fight for your privacy.
I think using the dictionary is cheating here.
That’s weird. When I install keyboards I don’t notice slowdowns but rather improvements due to the mainstream solutions being extremely bloated.
But that’s what the test is about. It’s not about how fast you can press keys. It’s about using your key position knowledge.