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“Invest in others’ lives as Christ did for us.”

Check out Romans 10:9.

My website: https://abouttreya.wordpress.com/

  • 4 Posts
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Joined 5 个月前
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Cake day: 2025年7月27日

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  • Trey A@lemmy.worldtoFirefox@lemmy.ml*Permanently Deleted*
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    3 个月前

    While it’s obviously sad to see devices lose support, Android 5, 6, and 7 came out ±10 years ago. If you’ve been running those Android versions on a device as your primary driver for this long, you’ve already missed out on a decade’s worth of software and security updates.

    At this point in time, assuming your battery hasn’t given out and still lasts <2 hours (trust me, I have an iPhone SE 2016 I’d love to use as an MP3 player, but I’d need to replace the battery first to get any meaningful usage out of it), if you still don’t want to/can’t upgrade your device to a new phone…

    …It might be (long past) time to upgrade to a new OS such as LineageOS. Even if your device can’t reach the latest Android 15 or 16, newer “custom operating systems” can oftentimes be even better than the original. This is speaking from a Pixel 2 XL owner who recently upgraded it from the long-discontinued Android 11 to the newest Android 15, now getting significantly better battery life and performance on top of a beautiful near stock experience.



  • Valid arguments. Laptops are not ideal for everyone, and even the “best” ones are hardly “one-size-fits-all.” Still, considering the percentage of the world that does rely on them over bringing around a mechanical keyboard and bunch of other accessories, laptops aren’t necessarily the BEST computers – they’re the “go” computers. I’m just suggesting that with future tech, folding phones and proper accessories could also begin to fill that gap. Think of Android’s desktop mode and the lapdock – the phones are getting powerful enough to do “real work” for a lot of people, had their phones just had the same screen sizes and proper keyboards.


  • That’s why I mentioned the keyboard accessory, be it some advanced folding keyboard with iPad Magic Keyboard-like tech or something of the sort. Sure, it’s not replacing laptops anytime soon, but again… think of the iPhone. “An iPod, a phone, and an internet communicator.”

    I’m surprised Jobs didn’t add “a camera” considering how for most people, smartphones have now encapsulated all four of those already. Sure, if you REALLY want the best out of each of those categories, you’ll almost always be better off carrying each individual item, but in terms of ease of use and convenience, smartphones win just about every time for those categories. In the future, I could see devices like these becoming the next “mini laptops” for most people, assuming we get to a point of comfortable prices and well-made accessories.





  • Of course! As for the “Focus Modes” thing, I actually have an idea on how something like this could be implemented. For instance, there are some apps out there like DockFix, DockFlow, and Modoki, all of which could supposedly let you pin apps and/or folders to your Dock. You could create folder menus for your apps this way and switch docks with different modes or settings! Alternatively, you could tag those files, folders, and apps that you use for a certain “Focus” mode, then just have aliases to those items!





  • Could someone test this with programs like GIMP, Darktable, and Inkscape? I’m curious about the potential of the Android phone as PC, particularly with the merging of Android and Chrome OS. If Android’s desktop mode progresses enough to a level of maturity to run Linux programs sufficiently, this combined with the general Linux on ARM efforts of Asahi and others could prove to be THE solution. Just imagine one of those tri-folding phones unfold to a tablet size with a folio-style keyboard and trackpad, then plugging the tablet-phone into a monitor and desktop setup to “get real work done.”


  • Genuine question – Are these updates shaping up to a 1.10.0, or is there going to be some major 2.0.0 refresh update? I always am curious with numbering schemes like this as to whether they’re about to do a major update or continue smaller ones.

    (Just imagine Terraria’s “Adventure’s Journey’s Finalie’s Conclusion’s End getting 1.9.9, only to refresh to 1.10.0 lol)





  • Trey A@lemmy.worldOPtomacOS@lemmy.worldHomebrew Installation Question
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    5 个月前

    Okay, so I’m still testing things out in terms of the Homebrew installations, but things are working MUCH better this time around. For instance, both GIMP and Darktable actually downloaded the latest versions AND actually work, so this might well become my new solution for app installations for everyone!

    Your last statement regarding the app updating though, the part where you said:

    If a GUI tool can auto update, Homebrew leaves it to auto update and actually stops updating the tool.

    I do want a bit more clarification if possible.

    1. Apps like GIMP and Darktable DON’T auto-update, though apps like Latest will detect that new versions are available. Normally, this means I have to go to the application’s website and download the new version myself. Will Homebrew automatically update these programs?
    2. Further, for the apps that do get auto-updated, do they remain in my Homebrew catalog and all to where I’d be able to remove or configure them with brew commands?
    3. Regarding apps that DON’T have built-in updaters like GIMP and the like, if I go to the developer’s website and get the newest versions, do I have to do anything with the originals installed via Homebrew CLI or app wrappers like Applite?

    Thank you sincerely for your time. I apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused.



  • Sorry, I tried using MacPorts in a VM and installing Nautilus with sudo port install Nautilus as suggested on the MacPorts website, but this was the final result after like 20 minutes of “installing” data and the like to no avail.

    (This was tested on a macOS Sequoia VM with an M4 MBA host running macOS Tahoe Beta 4. It is possible this may work better on an x86 Mac or older macOS version, but I wouldn’t get too caught up in this.)

    There is ONE other way to run Nautilus on macOS that I’ve used a bit, but it’s kind of cheating and not that great: Containers. Specifically, Docker and similar programs should allow this (which I did test once), but more recently Apple introduced their own Containerization framework which I also tested and was able to get up and running. The issue is that Xquartz, which you’d have to use to get any GUI Linux applications on macOS, isn’t very good in and of itself. No Retina support is the biggest dealbreaker for me, but this is also technically just running a micro Linux VM with access to your macOS files a bit like Windows Subsystem for Linux.


  • Answering your title question of “is it worth it,” considering that you seemingly either have to compile the app yourself or use an old bloated version with MacPorts, I would probably say “no.” I don’t think the time and difficulty you’d have to potentially go through just to run another file manager when you can’t even truly “replace” Finder is worthwhile.

    I’m curious though, what exactly do you want out of Nautilus specifically? You could argue “aesthetic” or something, but that’s just going to look out-of-place on macOS. Unless Nautilus has some hidden superpower somewhere, it’s less functional, too. I could understand Nemo (Cinnamon’s file manager), and I’d definitely consider Dolphin (KDE’s file manager), but Nautilus (to me) has always just been the least powerful file manager with the only advantage being looking native on Adwaita… which wouldn’t even be true if you used it on macOS. Not a criticism, genuine question.


  • I have always been curious about MacPorts’s applications. Usually I’d assume they’re either really old versions that were once available for the platform natively (such as Safari on Windows), but that’s worth checking out.

    Follow-up: Did a bit of research and looked into MacPorts. Yes, most their applications appear to be older versions, as I don’t see any indication that Nautilus (the GNOME file manager) or Dolphin (KDE’s file manager) is still in the works for macOS. I’m attempting to install this older version of Nautilus via MacPorts now in a virtual machine, and will follow up again with results.