Hosting a wiki isn't that expensive it's basically texts and some lightweight pictures. The whole english wikipedia is around 109GB of data.
sonalder
I think brave provide a slightly better experience overall, and privacy is a bit stronger too. Cromite might be better in some areas but DDG has better tracking protection against analytics from companies such as Adobe, Faceboo, Google, etc... by default.
DDG mobile browser had a contreverasy with allowing Microsoft tracking (DDG search engine is using MS Bing's back-end) but in other hands brave is also quite contreversial with affiliate link injections, optionnal "private ads" with Web3 advertisement. Cromite seems cleaner but is a community run project and there is no company backing it.
Honestly I haven't used it in years but it's definitely not the worst option you can choose on Android.
Zulip or Mattermost if you want basically a free (as in freedom) and open source alternative to Teams and slack But as you mention self-hosting isn't really an option it can become expensive.
Maybe a mix of Signal and Jitsi Meet (there is several public free instances) if you want a good balance between privacy, price and efficiency
Maybe look at the kSuite from Infomaniak it's not the best but might be a good balance too for your team.
Are you using Obtanium ? RSS Feed ? Or the app notify you and you manually download and install the update ?
So currently this is my recommendation for web browsers for Android.
Chromium based (best for security on Android)
- brave, disable cryptocrap, telemetry sponsor background and you're pretty much good to go.
- cromite, an active fork of bromite which is basically an upgrade of ungoogled chromium
- Vanadium, if you are using GrapheneOS
Firefox based browser (none support per-site isolation as of today)
- IronFox, a active fork of Mull, basically the most harden FF flavor on Android
- Fennec, basically a fully libre FF flavor
Yes this is more correct. They wanted to provide to their user an alternative store that meets their security criteria so GOS users can download and install other apps safely.
The issue is that any firefox-based browser on Android lack of per-site isolation unlike chromium browser. It's a security issue that Mozilla doesn't seem interested in fixing. And it does impact every fork such as IronFox (previously Mull)
I am mainly using Firefox engine on all my computers but on Android I am using either Vanadium when on GrapheneOS and a tweaked brave when not.
For me personnaly it has nothing to do with supporting Google's monopoly on web tech or not. It's not about telemetry either, it is a security concern.
I think you are looking for one of these
- NotesNook (best free tier in my opinion)
- logseq (like an open source obsidian)
- Joplin (cloud is paid but you can selfhost)
- Standard Notes (only support plain text on free tier)
I second this, there is several associations or comapnies that are running Jitsi Meet instances so you could have more proximity with the servers or more trust if it's a non-profit association you're part of for exemple.
It's quite new so maybe not as feature-packed but it might worth to bet on them cuz their app does looks great I agree!
Or maybe Miraheze but it doesn't sem federated either