

Yep, he showed around Calibre in the interview and most of it’s features. The calibre-server thingy is cool, you can host it on your home server and access your library from any device through a web interface.


Yep, he showed around Calibre in the interview and most of it’s features. The calibre-server thingy is cool, you can host it on your home server and access your library from any device through a web interface.


Oh interesting I wasn’t aware of how all of these things work. So even on the strictest CSS font visibility setting system fonts are not hidden (provided Document Fonts is enabled)? Local fonts I assume are hidden?


I remember thinking how strange it is that websites can know all of your installed fonts when I was playing around with https://coveryourtracks.eff.org/ and https://www.amiunique.org/
I’m on linux and I have some extra fonts installed. Just the combination of them alone is so unique to me that you don’t need anything else.


It has a lot of momentum, so it will continue to dominate. But I wonder if it will decline over the long term as Linux continues to improve. Similar to how smartphones barely differentiate themselves from one another these days (compared to the past) maybe operating systems will have a similar fate. Maybe I’m a bit naive, but perhaps Linux will eventually have all the stability and ease of use of Windows, while also offering privacy, customization, and open-source benefits so there will be no real reason to use windows and the split will be more even.
Maybe… eventually…
What are the main things Wezterm does better than Kitty, in your opinion? Back when I looked at trying a different terminal I was just not convinced there’s that much of a difference between say Kitty and the other hyped ones.
That being said, back then I didn’t need any of this session stuff and multiplexing as I used ZelliJ.