

The same issue does not appear on Element iOS/Android, or with other accounts on the same client. Signing in to a fresh profile seems to improve this, for a while, until it starts happening again Other accounts in the exact same environment do not have this issue. This makes element-desktop practically unusable for that account. The common denominator seems to be that the account with many (thousands) of rooms (almost all of which fully historical/archived with no ongoing activity apart from participants presence) consistently gets Element freeze, hang, be extremely slow. In particular, multiple accounts on the same Linux installation of element-desktop. * Multiple Linux distros, desktop environments, window managers, X11/Wayland, CPU architectures (x86_64, aarch64) To emphasize, we have for the past couple of years used Matrix routinely on: Getting the same behavior across distros and installations. Not the person you're replying to but following up on an identical past thread: I recommend giving the platform another quick try using which to me feels very Discord-like in terms of snappiness. Latency also doesn't help, the protocol requires loads of round trips for the JSON payloads to go back and forth, so if you're not near your homeserver you're going to see some annoying problems. Performance is getting improved all the time, especially in terms of quickly joining a room. When joining huge chat rooms like some of those on the homeserver, it can take a bit for the clients to sync up and get going. On the desktop, Nheko is incredibly fast, being written in a native language and being optimized for performance and all, but I don't use it because I just can't get used to the design. On the other hand, Element is ahead in terms of features and protocol support (like the (live) location sharing feature), but Fluffychat has the superior mobile app in terms of general look and feel IMO. Picking the right client is very important, though Element isn't always the fastest, and I find Cinny's UX to be much better for general chat, which is clearly very much… inspired by Discord. I'm running it on my own server and performance is quite acceptable. Maybe this isn't useful when I'm submitting tickets to wandb, but I can see this being very helpful when I'm talking to my bank. Or politicians who want to track your period. Data companies that extract every bit of information they can. A hacker (who may be interested in your bank or health care). The risk isn't your service provider spying on you, it is anyone that you aren't intending to talk to. I mean, they use these two examples in the post. Is there really any information that you want open? Are you violating HIPPA and privacy laws just by talking? Your health is of no concern to anyone but you and your health provider. You're likely talking about specific sums of money. Is there really any information that you want open? They're going to ask you security questions to confirm your identity. Step 13 Do the same thing with your left hand on the left hand side of the rectangle.> What is the benefit of end to end encryption in this scenario?.Wiggle your fingers and the paper should bend inwards. Step 12 Now the folds have been made, hold the rectangle with your left hand and slide your thumb and pointer finger up and underneath the two flaps on the right side.Step 11 Unfold, spin the square 90 degrees, and then fold in half again to create a rectangle.Step 10 With the numbers facing up, fold the square in half to make a rectangle.On the top of your flap write in the numbers 1 to 8 making sure there is one number on each half of the flap. Step 9 Flip the square over again and underneath each flap you can write a silly challenge or a question for your classmates.Step 8 Using a fineliner, write the names of 4 different colours on each of the 4 quarters.

Step 7 Flip the square over and it’s time to create your game!.Step 6 Fold each of the corners in to the centre to create another smaller square.Step 5 Flip the square over to the opposite side.Step 4 Fold this smaller square in half to create a rectangle and then open back out.Step 3 Fold each of the corners in to the centre to create a smaller square.If using our template, fold so the design is on the outside. Step 2 Fold the square in half point to point to make a triangle and then unfold.
CHATTERBOX LIVE CHAT DOWNLOAD
Alternatively you can download our free template, print, decorate and cut out ready for folding.
