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At the top of the front page of any Lemmy instance (e.g., lemmy.world), you'll see a green and white button that reads, "[ Subscribed | Local | All ]. Just click All and you'll be looking at the feed equivalent of r/all. It will display the feed from all federated instances combined.


The official Android app, Jerboa, doesn't require an account at all and defaults to anonymous browsing.


Cool thanks


Not sure why you couldn't continue doing so with Lemmy. Like reddit, you only need an account to participate, not browse.


Ya, I figured that out when I decided to give it a go and sign up. It takes two screens that look like one needs to sign up (just about everywhere else on the net would require it with a similar screen) but then it lets you pick a server without signing up. There is a big improvement they could implement: make it more obvious with less screens that you can browse without logging in...


Now if only they'd unlock volume control on their A-series Pixel Buds too.


Oh, the arrogance. How dare they make something the way they want it made, and then have the nerve to give it away for free? Some people, eh?


I would understand the frustration I hear from some users if this were a paid product...but it isn't.

The GNOME project is a massive undertaking and completely free. It's written by volunteers, sponsored developers, and commercial developers who derive their revenue from elsewhere. They own the trademark, so of course they're going to use it.

The bottom line is that thousands, if not hundreds of thousands of people happily use GNOME every day (yes, I'm currently one of them). I did _not_ care for legacy GNOME, and back then I chose something else (usually dwm and xmonad).

I really don't see what this fuss is about. There is a vast selection of alternative desktop environments and window managers to choose from. Get over it.


There are countless open source projects that don't charge a dime and don't have the "Gnome attitude".

There's such a thing as too opinionated (and it's coming from someone that likes opinionated).


Then maybe you should use one of those projects instead of GNOME? What's the problem here?


I did exactly that: I use KDE.


There are plenty of OSS projects that aren’t DEs.


Then maybe some of those project maintainers should start a DE, and see first-hand how it's really difficult and requires making a lot of tough decisions that don't apply to other projects?


Funny how the KDE guys never seem to get quite this level of flammage.

I extensively use Gnome but I think it might be time for me to consider switching.


"Not a paid product" is a gross oversimplification. In many ways it is a "paid product," or at least part of one.

This ain't just hobby stuff anymore. Businesses are catching on and using it, and so they're entrenching an older, stinky, take-it-or-leave-it way to do software, and what's worse, they're doing it on the back of a free-software-spirited labor.

It doesn't violate the letter of the GPL, but it sure as hell violates the spirit.


>It doesn't violate the letter of the GPL, but it sure as hell violates the spirit.

No it doesn't. The spirit of the GPL is essentially "do whatever you want with this as long as you keep distributing the source code." That's it. It says nothing about paid products or development style or keeping a certain style or direction or anything like that. The GNOME developers decided to change direction themselves, as the GPL says anyone can. It would no sense for them to give up their trademark to MATE when that was just a random offshoot that no one had any idea of whether it was serious or how long it would last. It's not even that active now, can you honestly say they would have benefited any more from having the GNOME name?

Like, come on my guy, you're flogging a horse that died more than a decade ago. You can continue this substance-free criticism of open source projects for as long as you want, just be aware that you get out what you put in.


I get people want the ghost of Stallman dead for whatever reason, but no, you don't get to just wave that away.

You seem to grossly misunderstand what "spirit" means here, because you described the letter.


No. The preamble to the GPL describes the spirit. Here's some direct quotes from the GPL v2.

https://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/gpl-2.0.en.html

>the GNU General Public License is intended to guarantee your freedom to share and change free software--to make sure the software is free for all its users

>When we speak of free software, we are referring to freedom, not price. Our General Public Licenses are designed to make sure that you have the freedom to distribute copies of free software (and charge for this service if you wish)

>Also, for each author's protection and ours, we want to make certain that everyone understands that there is no warranty for this free software.

And all of those parts are still the same. The "no warranty" here generally (and legally) means you don't get to complain if it doesn't work for you, unless you believe Stallman didn't understand what he meant when he wrote that.


The GNU project disagrees with your assessment:

https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/selling.html


> written by [...] sponsored developers, and commercial developers who derive their revenue from elsewhere.

I believe this is the likely root of the problem. Commercial developers who don't personally use GNOME at home and only only work on it because it's their job. The incentive of these developers is to keep GNOME minimal from their own perspective as developers, to make their jobs easier. They don't really care about GNOME users (despite their contrary rhetoric) and neither does their employer (Red Hat, etc). Their employer funds this GNOME development because they still sell workstation licenses or support contracts to big corps and workstations need a GUI environment that's viable from the point of view of salesmen, CTOs, and contract lawyers (none of whom will be using it.) GNOMES's style of user-hostile minimalism satisfies all these corporate interests.


>Commercial developers who don't personally use GNOME at home and only only work on it because it's their job.

You're acting like this is a bad thing but that's how open source is supposed to work. Every contributor works on their area of interest. For companies, they work on what helps their customers. There's a practical limit to how many users any contributor can support because developer time is a finite resource. With many contributors it's supposed to average out over time into something more general use. However the Linux desktop has historically been very bad at attracting a lot of corporate contributors. That's not specific to GNOME and it has nothing to do with corporate interests, plenty of other desktops are even more minimalistic and hostile to design changes.


As mentioned throughout this thread, Syncthing can seamlessly sync between Android phones and Windows/Linux hosts. There are apps for iOS as well, but they can be a bit more finicky due to Apple's app sandbox implementation.


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