This makes LibreWolf work well on the PinePhone without having to
manually use the FriendlyFox installation script.
Note that FriendlyFox was chosen over the mobile-config-firefox script
from postmarketOS due to FriendlyFox having less issues overall, such as
not breaking when the right click menu is long and popup menus having
altered styles for mobile support.
Might add some more search engines later, but Mullvad usually produces
better results for less popular content, especially with topics such as
PinePhone troubleshooting.
I don't use deno enough to justify having separate abbreviations for it,
and I doubt I will anytime soon due to the vastly superior ecosystem of
npm. Just as an example, `deno task` autocomplete support isn't
implemented, whereas `npm run` does have autocomplete.
I only use alacritty on the phone due to the superior touch support.
Touch support might be added to kitty later if someone is willing to
patch it. See: https://github.com/kovidgoyal/kitty/issues/5432
Now that tmux works again, it makes sense to choose it over zellij due
to the vastly superior community support around it. Using tmux-256color
makes colors work properly in programs like htop, and neovim benefits
from squiggly lines and italics from kitty as well.
Not interested in dealing with fixing the nixf-tidy issue here which
would cause a massive formatting diff with nixfmt-rfc-style. Might
upstream later or find a better solution without chameleon.nvim.
There really isn't a reason to use pug or ecr in 2024 when the
development experience with JSX/TSX is so great, and sticking to
what's popular makes it easier for other people to contribute.
I haven't used Vue in years and have much more expertise in vanilla
JavaScript/TypeScript with React and JSX/TSX, so there's really no
reason for me to keep it here.
As much as I love reading the Crystal programming language, it's clear
that there are more opportunities to be had with prioritizing Rust
instead. The ecosystem for Rust is vastly superior with higher quality
libraries and an LSP that's actually feature-complete, and I'd rather
deal with the known problems I'm aware of with Rust than the problems
I'm aware of with Crystal.
Rust won. Joking aside, the ecosystem for Rust is vastly superior, even
if the language is more difficult.
Having to change the package list in two places was a bit redundant. We
can also use `with` patterns now since nixd warns if there are escaping
variables being used.
Note that variables used in multiple places are kept to make it easier
to recognize that those variables must be changed together. Also note
that inherit (pkgs) inside of mkMerge are currently kept to reduce the
diff.
Prevents the desktop entry from showing in applications like Thunar.
Long-term this isn't a viable solution since it prevents the hidden
applications from being used by Thunar.
- kanjidraw: Online alternatives with radicals etc. are better
- dmenu-wayland: Breaks with multiple monitors
- obs: Easier to use wf-recorder
- wallust: Easier to use stylix
Seems to fix an issue where WebRTC was previously broken in
ungoogled-chromium. Note that `default_public_interface_only`
is used instead of `default` to prevent local IP address leaks.
Might be able to use swaync after all if I avoid using the mpris module
with it. This has the advantage of being supported by ironbar, which
would make missing notifications less likely.
Alacritty has vastly superior touch support compared to kitty, which
doesn't feature touch support at all. The simplicity of Alacritty also
makes it faster and overall cleaner to use than GNOME Console (kgx).
This *shouldn't* have changed anything anyway since `man git-web--browse`
suggests that only a subset of browsers are supported anyway, which
doesn't include librewolf.
This was my attempt at using the volume module, however I'd rather not
have to deal with using the small sliders that are extremely difficult
to see with the GTK theme I'm using.
I tried changing the colors with color, background, and border-color,
however I wasn't able to achieve the appearance I wanted, and disabling
the built-in popup results in a buggy left-clicking experience.
Will stop trying to make Hyprland work on mobile devices due to all the
issues with it for now.
For future reference, some issues include:
- Touch events not registering as touches, thus breaking applications
that have touch support like LibreWolf with FriendlyFox.
- OSK support in general being not there yet with the best keyboard
Squeekboard not working and wvkbd not being comfy enough to use.
- Screen size in general being small already so having multiple apps
side-by-side is mostly useless, especially when the OSK interferes
with this as well.
This worked but broke when changing the display from e.g. 200% scaling
to 100% scaling. Since being able to easily change the scaling of
Hyprland was one of the main reasons I wanted to try Hyprland over
Phosh, I don't really have a use case for Hyprland on touch devices at
this moment, especially with all the drawbacks of using it on such a
small screen and without hardware acceleration.
Squeekboard was misbehaving so I thought I'd have better luck with
wvkbd, but it turns out that this isn't the case. For some reason,
nothing can be typed at all which is even worse than Squeekboard.
Shouldn't be needed anymore now that we're using the latest stylix
commit. Note that I don't care enough about this to use 0.3 highlight
transparency instead of 0.5.