/u/Ategon , seems like the links lead to an error page, is this still the recommended way of requesting a community creation?
Glad to hear that! That's an area of dsub which I appreciate: it's pretty clear what's cached offline and not, transitioning to offline is one tap away, and caching whole sub-trees of the library is easy and convenient. As a frequent flyer, I get that I might be an atypical user, but I rely on this very much.
Element says lots of things.
Looks like it was caused by the "size of streaming cache" which I had set to 0 under the assumption/hope it would mean "unlimited". Though I had to log out and back on for album art to effectively reappear.
Glad this project is alive and well! For strange reasons, covers are not displayed in-app (replaced by a generic placeholder) but do appear in the android media related screens (media controls, lock screen, etc).
You seem angry. It's just too bad you couldn't funnel this energy into learning and configuring nextcloud to your needs. It is actually pretty lean when you set it up properly. Anyhow, happy you found something you liked eventually.
They are going mainstream the same way fully autonomous cars are: in the wildest dreams of tech oligarchs on a deregulation crusade. Humanoid robots are actually a tougher problem to crack, and this coming up now is rather the sign of AI investors desperate to diversify out of language models, so when THAT bubble eventually pops, I'm not sure how much will remain of humanoid bots either.
There is no dedicated native mobile app yet (though there is a bounty for it), so the mobile experience happens via a PWA that is decent for browsing and quick editing, but lacks offline support
If you need semantic notes with typing and structure, nothing beats https://triliumnotes.org/ IMO/E
The pace of the project is moreover very high these days
For the record, it seems the project moved on, just without its previous maintainer, to github: https://github.com/tt-rss/tt-rss
Prosody is a great piece of software, and so is ejabberd which offers some perks. I can't speak for the other servers (mongooseim, openfire, tigase, ...) which I haven't tried in a long time,
All that's to say that it's amazing that we get so many well maintained and compatible servers (and clients) implementations in XMPP-land, and all the implications for its healthy future.
Ahh, that's good to know. Perhaps a mention of this in the original post might help some lost lemmians such as myself :-)