Signal still requires a phone number to use it. What they recently added is the ability to message people without needing to know their phone number.
Yes. With MXroute, you pay for storage and can create as many accounts, emails, aliases, etc. as you want.
iOS Reminders app synced with Radicale server.
- free stuff
- subscription
Pick one
No, KDE does not have their own virtualization gui. Boxes can still be used on KDE as well though. If you really want nothing to do with Gnome, then virt-manager will be your best option.
But Sony only provides 2 to 3 years of software and security updates, so getting an older model might not be the best idea either.
Doku still has the typical wiki style version control. It uses other text files to keep a changelog without cluttering the markdown file.
I used Namecheap for several years and was happy with it, but the numerous price increases finally pushed me to switch. I recently decided on Porkbun after the many positive reviews I read online. It is affordable and has a very clean interface that doesn’t constantly nag me about purchasing other services. I’m really liking it so far.
It’s very anti competitive and monopolistic if you ask me
I don't disagree, but while I would love having full Firefox on iOS, the one positive of the current situation is that it is the only thing keeping Google from a complete browser monopoly. Firefox marketshare is insignificant, and without WebKit on iOS devices, Chromium browsers would make up 95% of the browser market. I think that would be worse overall in the long-term than iPhone users being stuck with Safari skins.
Basic email is free, but you need iCloud+ to get support for custom domains and more than 5GB of storage.
I recommend Roku to people who don't want to pay for an Apple TV because the UI is very simple and easy to use. It's just an app grid. My parents weren't able to figure out how to use Fire TV or Android/Google TV because it throws too much at them making it difficult to find what they are looking for. I also dislike that a lot of the content recommendations are for services I don't pay for, which makes them useless and nothing but ads.
Twine is a great simple RSS reader and it is open source.
I am currently using NewsBlur because I like how it syncs across devices and its tagging system. It is also open source, but it is not the prettiest and the UX takes some getting used to.