

Does this work on firefox? Does ublock origin block this?
Is this why linkedin eats so damn much ram. It eays 300 mb for a single tab. I opened 3 linkedin tabs and it lagged my entire computer.


Does this work on firefox? Does ublock origin block this?
Is this why linkedin eats so damn much ram. It eays 300 mb for a single tab. I opened 3 linkedin tabs and it lagged my entire computer.


Me too but tapping the same spot to get to the same app still works so I just keep using it.


Although the usage of (x)wayland is novel, there have already beem projects which do something similar before.
Termux can run a linux container in a proot, which you can then connect to via an app like vnc to get graphics.
There exist several options to automate this setup, such as anlinux. There is also the proprietary andronix, which used to be open source but now it looks like tgere repos aren’t being updated.
It’s bad reporting to frame this as a novel app, when it’s not. The novel thing is the way this app does xwayland rendered by a native wayland compositor (instead of remote desktop softeare or other solutions), which is really cool though.


This is what zip does. It compresses files individually, and then combines them into the archive. This comes with the advantage that you don’t have to extract the whole archive to view and edit files, but it comes with a very big disadvantage, which is that there is no compression across files. Redundant data in each file is not deduplicated.
Tar.gz does compress across files, which saves more space. That is to say, the reason why we don’t just tar gzed files together, is because people decided that compression savings matter more than not having to extract the whole archive to view/edit files.
7z is the best of both worlds, as it compresses across files, but also lets you view and edit files without extracting the whole archive. But it’s important to remember that tar.gz is ubiquitous for it’s compatibility, rather than it’s performance or features. Even the most smallest, stripped down utilities, or the most oldest, out of date systems, always have gz and tar, whereas even on modern desktop distros 7z may need to be explicitly installed.


Except Ubuntu freezes the packages from debian unstable meaning, often Ubuntu LTS releases have older packages than Debian Stable.
Does the script attempt to run though? If linkedin runs this and other scripts it would explain why the site is so bloated.