![]() The pdf reader scenario is just one of many cases the desktop on other OS's became a vector to spread ads while the linux has only improved over time. Okular is on the same direction but is more feature rich, not surprising considering the KDE heritage. On linux, evince has gained very discrete features over the years but works very very well, actually better than before it probably eats a bit more memory because of the newest libs. I often see windows users using aberrations to read PDF's with ads and trying to persuade the user to join an online service like foxit or adobe. Still has a long way to go but has been improving consistently. Interesting, the linux desktop landscape has moved on the opposite direction. I'm an artist and Illustrator is my main medium Time Sink's tracking tells me that I've spent about 3.3 days in Illustrator so far this year, and 9.5 days in Safari, and everything else is measured in hours and kinda looks like a rounding error compared to those two apps. Like, Bartender is useful and makes dealing with all the little utilities that want to live in the menu bar a lot easier. Most of the apps I've installed on my Mac lately are to change the way the OS behaves, to be honest. Which is a super-amazing native app designed for writers that sets a pretty high bar for anyone who wants to "continue to improve writers’ workflows in the coming decade and innovate in that space". I am sort of starting to maybe substitute Scrivener for it. I relied on Evernote for ages but then it got rewritten as a sluggish web app and now it's just utterly unusable and I have not found anything that fits its place of being a notebook that lives in native apps on my Mac, iPhone, and iPads, and lets me collaborate on some things with my friends who use Windows and Android. ![]() ![]() The problem for me is as much that excellent Mac apps are being replaced by shitty Electron crap as anything else.
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