Zorin OS, which was the second distro I ever tried, I hated how outdated their repos were since they were using an older Ubuntu LTS repository for packages. It was quite painful to install software that would otherwise have worked out-of-the-box on Ubuntu. I hope this is no longer the case today.
I try doing something productive, like working on developing a new skill, or work on some of my hobby projects. That prevents me from feeling lonely.
Here's some that I thought about:
- Wikipub
- Wikihive (A bee mascot)
- Academoo (A cow mascot)
- LinkLynx (A lynx with a magnifying glass maybe?)
- Encyclonet
Hi, author of the Piped link bot here! I think this is meme great feedback to throw light on some issues on the experience with the bot. 😂 I'll open an issue at https://github.com/TeamPiped/lemmy-piped-link-bot to track this later.
Should be fixed, I pushed a fix yesterday! :)
Hey, thanks for the message! I've fixed the issue already, which was caused by a regression in one of my changes. To prevent this from happening in the future, I've added unit tests for the same. Sorry for the inconvenience caused!
Author of Piped (and also a member of TeamNewPipe and LibreTube) here.
I haven't seen any changes from YouTube recently, the ways we fetch age restricted content still seem to work for most videos. However, this method may not work for all videos as YouTube has different levels of age restrictions afaict. I've seen very few videos fall under that category personally.
If anything were to change in the future, I may consider implementing something similar to what this extension does (or use their API) in Piped.
Author of Piped here.
I think it is quite unlikely for YouTube to implement a DRM for watching videos. In anyways, we will keep fighting collaboratively as long as we can.
The most likely way YouTube probably will affect us currently is if they decide to log in wall their platform like how Twitter did.
You could try HF Code Autocomplete VSCode extension. That would allow you to use open-source LLMs like https://github.com/bigcode-project/starcoder.
Piped can be more privacy friendly in a few cases, as you don't need an account for subscriptions or playlists.
Here are some differences to Invidious:
- Subscriptions don't necessarily require an account
- Playlists don't necessarily require an account
- Piped supports Infinite scrolling
- Piped supports Webm videos
- Piped can stream videos from Odysee if the same video is available there.
- Piped is a lot lighter on the server
- Piped always proxies your traffic to Google's servers (most Invidious servers don't proxy videos to YouTube by default)
- Piped has SponsorBlock integrated (DeArrow will be added soon)
- Piped has ReturnYouTubeDislike support via RYD-Proxy
- Piped can only be self-hosted on a server. Invidious on the other hand can work fine on local networks.
- Piped is a lot easier to administer than Invidious as an instance operator.
I'll conclude by saying that I was once an Invidious user. I decided to write Piped at a time when Invidious was riddled with extremely odd bugs and performance issues. Some of these issues still persist to this day. I've always kept performance a top priority in Piped. I wanted to create a better alternative to YouTube than Invidious for my use case and threat model. I think I have succeeded in that :)
It should be back now! I've migrated it to a new server earlier today since the old one had some issues.