Thunderbird is the only Mozilla product that doesn’t suck!
Somewhere between Linux woes, gaming, open source, 3D printing, recreational coding, and occasional ranting.
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Thunderbird is the only Mozilla product that doesn’t suck!
Have a look at Luakit (but please don’t try to configure it – this is absurd!)
it doesn’t really suit my needs.
What are your needs?
They do it since quite some time now, right?
Also: If someone manages to tamper with the downloadable ISO … they likely will be able to tamper with the signature files, too.
Mmh, okay. So I’ll continue re-downloading videos in non-HDR variants. But good to see it implemented, though.
I’m not following Linux drama, sorry.
So no more dark and dull looking videos?
but I’d like to give Nginx Proxy Manager a try, it seems easier to manage stuff not in docker.
NPM is pretty agnostic. If it receives a request for a specific address and port combination it just forwards the traffic to another specific address and port combination. This can be a docker container, but also can be a physical machine or any random URL.
It also has Let’s Encrypt included (but that should be a no-brainer).
I run my website as static site from within a Docker container, I wonder how I would get the information about the other containers into that site.
Do you directly serve that site from the host or do you run the script and write something in a volume the site has read access to or bind a file?
If your company goes full-on Microsoft cloud (including OneDrive), maybe try logging in on https://www.microsoft365.com/ with your corporate account. From there you have access to all the OneDrive files that are shared with you, as well as all Office web applications (they’re basically identical with the installed apps).
Using a Chromium-based browser you can run the individual web-apps like chromium --app="https://...."
to give them a more native look-and-feel by removing the browser interface.
Same goes for Teams, btw.: Just open http://teams.microsoft.com/, it works just like the installed version. Including audio, video, screen sharing, and notifications.
Do you guys have any suggestions?
Because I don’t like software getting in my way I just cobbled together some HTML and CSS and call it a day.
So we’ll see a release in November this year?
Usually you just see LibreOffice and nothing else, so it’s fine, I guess. Not a web-based editor, but usable.
Ah, I see. Not as native web application, though.
They’re using Alpine Linux, install X and Openbox and Xvnc and serve KasmVNC via Nginx and connect via KasmVNC to that X instance. LibreOffice is started in fullscreen and looks like a slightly blurry web application.
But in reality it is just a regular desktop installation with some extra things.
@fikran@lemm.ee, maybe this is a solution? I wouldn’t recommend it because it’s not really a web-based document editor.
So, LibreOffice can be used over the Internet in a web browser?
Ca. 20 years ago I worked for a company that used X forwarding for their backup management system (a Java application running on one of the servers) which somewhat worked on their wired LAN (at least most some of the time).
This was just unreliable and slow and had issues left and right.
Back than I tried this. The performance was horrible, even on a good connection. It was barely tolerable on LAN, but over the Internet … no. Just no. There were and are better solution for accessing a remote machine.
Even if you ignore the recent few fuck-ups Mozilla did: It does.
It sucks less than other non-Chromium browsers, though.