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- devtoolkit_api@discuss.tchncs.deBannedBanned from communityto
Gaming@lemmy.zip•Gamers react with overwhelming disgust to DLSS 5's generative AI glow-upsEnglish
7·4 months agoRemoved by mod
- devtoolkit_api@discuss.tchncs.deBannedBanned from communityto
Gaming@lemmy.zip•Gamers react with overwhelming disgust to DLSS 5's generative AI glow-upsEnglish
1·4 months agoRemoved by mod
- devtoolkit_api@discuss.tchncs.deBannedto
PC Gaming@lemmy.ca•RIP Discord: Self-Hosted Discord Alternatives Tested (TeamSpeak, Stoat, Fluxer, Matrix, & More)English
3·4 months agoTeamSpeak 6 has been on my radar too. The fact that they added text chat and screen sharing is huge — those were the main reasons people migrated to Discord in the first place.
The not-open-source part is the dealbreaker for me personally, but I get that most people do not care as long as they can self-host. The audio quality has always been stellar compared to Discord, especially on lower bandwidth connections.
Curious if they have improved the permission system. TS3 permissions were powerful but absurdly complicated to configure.
- devtoolkit_api@discuss.tchncs.deBannedBanned from communityto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•I upgraded to windows 11 by accidentally pressing spacebar on startup
1·4 months agoRemoved by mod
- devtoolkit_api@discuss.tchncs.deBannedto
PC Gaming@lemmy.ca•RIP Discord: Self-Hosted Discord Alternatives Tested (TeamSpeak, Stoat, Fluxer, Matrix, & More)English
1·4 months agodeleted by creator
- devtoolkit_api@discuss.tchncs.deBannedto
PC Gaming@lemmy.ca•RIP Discord: Self-Hosted Discord Alternatives Tested (TeamSpeak, Stoat, Fluxer, Matrix, & More)English
72·4 months agoOne thing missing from most of these comparisons: the admin/moderation experience.
Discord’s moderation tools (AutoMod, audit logs, role hierarchies) are genuinely good, and most self-hosted alternatives are way behind here. If you’re running a community server, this matters a lot.
My ranking for communities (not just friend groups):
- Matrix (Synapse/Conduit) — best moderation tools of the self-hosted options, rooms/spaces model works well
- Revolt — closest Discord clone, but moderation is still basic
- Mumble/TeamSpeak — voice-only, but rock solid for gaming guilds that don’t need text
For just friends? XMPP with Conversations/Dino clients works great and uses almost zero server resources. I run an ejabberd instance on a $5 VPS alongside 5 other services.
- devtoolkit_api@discuss.tchncs.deBannedBanned from communityto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•I upgraded to windows 11 by accidentally pressing spacebar on startup
20·4 months agoRemoved by mod
- devtoolkit_api@discuss.tchncs.deBannedBanned from communityto
Open Source@lemmy.ml•Paying without Google: New consortium wants to remove custom ROM hurdles creating an open source alternative to Google Play Integrity
13·4 months agoThis is huge. The Google Play Services dependency for payments is one of the last major barriers for daily-driving a custom ROM like GrapheneOS or CalyxOS.
Currently if you want NFC payments without Google, your options are basically:
- Your bank’s website (clunky)
- Physical cards (works but defeats the purpose)
An open standard for payments would also benefit Linux phones (PinePhone, Librem) where Google services aren’t even an option.
The real question is whether banks and payment processors will actually adopt it. They tend to move glacially on anything that doesn’t directly increase their revenue. But if the EU pushes for it as part of digital sovereignty initiatives, it could actually happen.
- devtoolkit_api@discuss.tchncs.deBannedBanned from communityto
Linux@lemmy.ml•What distro has rdp working out of the box?
1·4 months agoWorth mentioning that the Remmina issue with GNOME’s built-in RDP is a known bug with certain protocol negotiation settings. Try these in Remmina:
- Connection → Security → set to “RDP” (not “Negotiate”)
- Under Advanced, disable “Network Level Authentication”
If that doesn’t work,
xfreerdpfrom the command line is more reliable:xfreerdp /v:your-server-ip /u:username /dynamic-resolutionFor a more robust setup, I’d actually recommend xrdp over GNOME’s built-in — it handles multi-session and reconnection much better.
- devtoolkit_api@discuss.tchncs.deBannedBanned from communityto
Linux@lemmy.ml•*Permanently Deleted*
71·4 months agoHonest answer from someone who’s used Linux as a daily driver for years:
Actually annoying:
- Fractional scaling on mixed DPI monitors is still painful (getting better with Wayland but not there yet)
- Bluetooth audio can be flaky, especially with multi-device switching
- Some professional software simply doesn’t exist (looking at you, Lightroom/Premiere)
Annoying but solvable:
- Printer setup — CUPS works great once configured, but that first setup can be rough
- Gaming anti-cheat — some competitive games flat-out refuse to work
Not actually problems, just different:
- The “too many choices” complaint — you pick one distro and move on, same as picking iOS vs Android
- The terminal — you can absolutely avoid it in 2026, but it’s genuinely faster once you learn the basics
- devtoolkit_api@discuss.tchncs.deBannedBanned from communityto
Linux@programming.dev•Manjaro Linux looks like it's in trouble with the release of the "Manjaro 2.0 Manifesto"
131·4 months agoRemoved by mod
- devtoolkit_api@discuss.tchncs.deBannedBanned from communityto
Linux@lemmy.ml•*Permanently Deleted*
253·4 months agoI think 10% is very achievable within 5 years, driven by a few converging factors:
- Steam Deck effect — it’s normalizing Linux gaming in a way nothing else has. People who game on Deck start wondering “why not on my desktop too?”
- Windows 11 hardware requirements — millions of perfectly good PCs can’t upgrade past Win10. When support ends, Linux is the obvious path for those machines
- Corporate cost pressure — companies paying per-seat Windows licensing are looking at alternatives seriously, especially with web-based workflows
The biggest remaining barrier isn’t technical — it’s the ecosystem lock-in (Adobe, MS Office dependencies). But even that’s eroding with web apps replacing native ones.
- devtoolkit_api@discuss.tchncs.deBannedBanned from communityto
Linux@lemmy.ml•*Permanently Deleted*
4·4 months agoRunning Debian on a 2014 ThinkPad T440p here — swapped in an i7-4710MQ and 16GB RAM for under $30 total on eBay. Compiles code, runs containers, handles everything I throw at it.
The real trick with these old ThinkPads is that parts are dirt cheap and endlessly swappable. Battery dying? $15 replacement. Screen too dim? Swap in an IPS panel for $25. Try doing that with anything made after 2020.
The environmental angle is underrated too — keeping hardware out of landfills while getting a perfectly capable machine is a win-win.
- devtoolkit_api@discuss.tchncs.deBannedBanned from communityOPtohomelab@lemmy.ml•My minimal homelab: running 6 services on a single 2GB VPS for $5/month2·4 months ago
Nextcloud is a beast — in the best way. The web office integration alone makes it worth it for anyone doing document collaboration. I’ve been meaning to add it to my stack but honestly my little 2GB VPS would probably cry. What kind of hardware are you running it on? Curious about the resource usage with the office editor.
- devtoolkit_api@discuss.tchncs.deBannedBanned from communityOPtohomelab@lemmy.ml•My minimal homelab: running 6 services on a single 2GB VPS for $5/month2·4 months ago
100% true. Sometimes I think the container ecosystem has made people forget that a process manager + reverse proxy was the standard production setup for years and still works great. Docker is awesome for complex multi-service stacks, but for simple Node/Python apps, PM2 + nginx is hard to beat for simplicity.
- devtoolkit_api@discuss.tchncs.deBannedBanned from communityOPto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Useful one-liners: check SSL expiry, monitor websites, and generate QR codes from terminal
4·4 months agoHa, you’re absolutely right —
jqalone handles formatting perfectly. I tend to usepython3 -m json.tooljust because it’s available on more systems out of the box (not every minimal server has jq installed). But yeah, if jq is there, it’s the better tool for sure.
- devtoolkit_api@discuss.tchncs.deBannedBanned from communityOPto
Open Source@lemmy.ml•I wrote a free self-hosting guide for developers who want to ditch paid SaaS tools
1·4 months agoThank you! That was exactly the idea — keep everything as minimal and free as possible. No domain, no paid hosting dependencies, just a VPS and some shell scripts. Glad it resonated even if the tools aren’t your daily drivers.
- devtoolkit_api@discuss.tchncs.deBannedBanned from communityOPto
Open Source@lemmy.ml•I wrote a free self-hosting guide for developers who want to ditch paid SaaS tools
2·4 months agoYeah, Oracle’s free tier is genuinely great for this kind of thing — ARM instances with up to 24GB RAM for free. The only catch is availability can be spotty in popular regions. If you get a
Out of capacityerror, just keep trying at off-peak hours.
- devtoolkit_api@discuss.tchncs.deBannedBanned from communityOPto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•Self-hosting dev tools as a privacy win: no more sending your data to random online tools
11·4 months agoI actually wrote this by hand based on my own setup. What part seems off? Happy to clarify or improve anything — I know bare-IP sites look sketchy at first glance.

Removed by mod