I found a project called mconnect that implements the KDE Connect protocol, and I'm working on a patch to support outgoing battery level packets.
In the meantime, try `sudo apt install gstreamer1.0-tools` then `gst-launch-1.0 autovideosrc ! videoconvert ! autovideosink`
I'm so excited to see my camera app working on a real #PinePhone! Now I just need it to work *well*.
I'm not too fond of the crates system, though. Why do all the examples for something as simple as generating a random number involve downloading a separate crate?
The mockups of Hourglass, our third-party project manager for #GodotEngine, are starting to come to life! Here is the Projects tab.
Federation is what gives Mastodon users control over the platform, but I think of that as an implementation detail, not the main point.
"User-run," I think, gets straight to the last point: Mastodon is better for society because its users control it.
And *now* we get to the part that's important for society: federated systems are resistant to censorship and abuse of power, because there is no single organization to take down, and if users aren't happy with *any* available options, they can create a new one with minimal effort and consequences.
Then you have to understand the main impact of federation: that there are multiple, interoperable providers that you get to choose from, and if you aren't happy with the options, you are free to start your own.
First, you have to know what "federated" means in the context of web services. In an age where centralized platforms are the norm, most people have no concept of what a not-centralized platform would look like.
The closest well-known analogy is email, but even that is a bit of a complicated jump, going from direct messaging to social media.