If you restrict it, then it isn't public. I'm not saying that encrypted group chats are useless. But if it is public and anyone can join anyway, then encryption adds no secrecy.
While I personally use KeepassXC and Keepass2Android on mobile devices (as with KeepassDX there is no reliable way of syncing the database that I know of) to other less tech-inclined people I'd always recommend Bitwarden as it is much more suitable to most people's usecases.
And for how long to they have to be "safely stored"? For how long do they have to be buried without anyone digging them up? And where are we burying anyway where there is no risk of anyone digging them up intentionally or accidentally, no risk of natural phenomena interfering, no risk of the barrels breaking and nuclear waste seeping into our water? There is a reason why countries have been struggling to find these safe storage spaces for decades. I'd argue that is because there aren't any.
I would suggest right-click in the folder in your file explorer -> open in terminal -> sudo nano
autocomplete file name (tab tab). At least to me that doesn't seem that much more involved and is safer.
Otherwise, as others have noted, there are apparently ways of doing what you want, but it is discouraged for good reasons.
Keepass2Android handles that pretty well. It checks for external changes to the remote database before every local edit. And the desktop nextcloud app notices conflicts as well and can create a second version of the file if there are conflicts. You can then check for the differences with something like keepass-diff. But that should only happen if you change your db without syncing first, so while you are offline or the nextcloud app wasn't running.
Fuck Pocket with your AI dick Mozilla, just leave me a toggle in about:config to turn it off or I'll find a fork that has none of that shit.
I think you might enjoy Librewolf
Elon Musk's many children are only insofar hypothetical that he has yet to see them
Have you worked with Godot? The developers of Cassette Beasts seem pretty happy with it.
I'll have to take a look at that
Well when you install CalyxOS you can relock the bootloader afterwards, it comes with microg, which vanilla Lineage dodn't support at all last time I checked, and it comes with a firewall app as well. So, different focus than Lineage I'd say.
This one. I haven't tested it systematically but it works well enough for me. If I search just for 'restaurants', the map will use my location, but the regular search results are tripadvisor and opentable results for Chicago, Bronx, and Milwaukee, none of which are remotely close to me.
Edit: Just realised the marking wasn't saved, but the toggle is right above the map.
I like it