Canadian fraud is on another level. When I worked for a Dutch company my boss forced me to take a sales pitch from some Canadian startup. They claimed to have some new magic wireless electricity technology using new unreleased quantum physics principles or whatever and had actually managed to get a significant contract from some part of the Canadian government (that was the only part of the pitch that was not a lie). The website was screaming scam with: crypto AI quantum compute, etc. The sales pitch was an actual live videocall where they just told us a bunch of lies straight to our face.
First and last time I ran into something so blatant. We didn't fall for it btw.
My own daily driver is Firefox, so I basically only open Brave just for this website. I personally prefer managing apps on my phone through a browser on my laptop instead of fiddling with F-Droid on the phone.
DroidStore is a web catalog of open-source Android apps drawn from F-Droid, IzzyOnDroid, and curated GitHub releases.
Talks to the Android phone over USB. Open the page, and install APKs from the browser. It drives ADB over WebUSB, so there is no client to install, no account, and no telemetry.
I built it (vibe coded) because of Google's Android developer verification requirement. From 30 September 2026 in Brazil, Indonesia, Singapore, and Thailand, with a wider rollout from 2027, any app installed on a certified Android device must be registered to a developer who has verified their identity with Google. That can mean handing over legal name, address, phone number, and a government ID, plus registering every app's package identifier. Apps whose authors have not verified by the deadline will not install through the normal flow in those regions.
F-Droid has refused to comply for very practical reasons. It cannot force the thousands of independent developers it distributes to register with Google, and it cannot claim those apps' package identifiers for itself without seizing exclusive distribution rights to other people's software. By its own account, the requirement would end the project and leave its users unable to install or even update apps.
The one install path Google has committed to keeping open is ADB/sideloading, for local development and power users. DroidStore wraps that in a browser so installing a known, auditable open-source app stays a single click over USB, with no command line and no F-Droid client. It is a stopgap to keep these apps reachable after the deadline. At least until Google also decides to block that route I guess.
I haven't put it on Github yet to publish the source and have others self-host this, but will do if people turn out to be interested in this. So far there was only one user (me) :P
I do early returns in code I write, but ONLY because everybody seems to do it. I prefer stuff to be in predictable places: variables at the top, return at the end. Simpler? Delphi/Pascal style.
A single malicious infotainment outlet can fool thousands or perhaps millions of real people as that fact gets repeated in different forms and amplified with nobody checking for a valid source.
Feel free to accuse the Germans. Russian bribes is basically why they have some of the most expensive energy in the world now. They're surprisingly corrupt for a "developed" "high tech" nation.
Not if you consider that you need to either renew or add battery capacity (and panels and power electronics) after x years? Or did you take that into account?
First and last time I ran into something so blatant. We didn't fall for it btw.