Just stick to signal, matrix can be used the same way but it's a lot more complicated and requires involvement in keeping your backup key safe, otherwise you'll lose every encrypted message! Signal is similar to whatsapp. (which is obviously...a popular app...which should already explain the simplicity of setting it up.)
Midou
If it's relevant to your actual job, learning to use k8s will benefit you more. Generally i'd prefer to keep the bare metal OS as clean as possible to avoid breaking anything during upgrades and such, and keep the containers and normal running apps on separate VMs that can communicate with eachothers, k8s is mostly good if you got a lot of servers and want to manage them all at once through a single "orchestrator". But for self hosting stuff in your home it's kinda overkill. But it still can be used to manage things up. So imo go for k8s since it can be used in homeservers, it's just that it's kinda like using a nuclear bomb to kill a wasp.
Thunderbird on desktop, fairemail on android.
The more i read this the funnier it gets. Holy fuck twitter you really found a way to go even lower.
I do not want to touch a single line of code in PHP. Even brainfuck is more attractive than PHP
No wonder why meta wants to take part of the fediverse! /s
You're limited to 100 api requests per minute now (no longer per user, but per api key). It's doable but for large scale tools it's not sustainable to do so.
They should stop protesting and let the place rot, they're already on lemmy and officially moved there now. Best thing they could do is to lock the subreddit, point to lemmy, and keep it like that till admins feels like force-reopening an (illegal!) subreddit and appoint supermods that won't do anything with it. r/piracy is dead, long live c/piracy official lemmy community.
Hopefully this means companies using android will stop being lazy or cutting corners and finally give to everyone the vanilla desktop experience instead of restricting it on overpriced expensive ph ones!
They don't know what should they do at this point, they wanted to scrape the website (which is what teddit plans to do) but saw that it would be too muc work, then they said they would use graphQL and now they want to cache requests to reduce the API usage while asking for the instance admins to provide the private key. They made a poll on github on wether they should make the telemetry of sending the number of requests in a totally private way, and the majority was fine, but the devs were still skeptical on adding this feature, so yeah, libreddit doesn't have a bright future currently.
They don't even plan to scrape the website, so libreddit might eventually die. To be fair i think that would be a great way for me to stop lurking at reddit and look for answers and solutions elsewhere in the end.
Our VMs are properly synced, it's a known kbin bug but i haven't seen if they solved it already. Once they do fix it i'll update it.