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Tonearm, New Unofficial TIDAL Client for Linux, Hits Beta

23 janvier 2026 à 18:48

Tonearm is a new GTK4/libadwaita TIDAL client that delivers what the streaming service itself doesn’t: a native Linux app with solid desktop integration – albeit unofficially, of course. It’s the third unofficial client for Linux I’ve covered, joining High Tide and the Electron-based Tidal-Hifi. All exist as TIDAL doesn’t provide a Linux app itself, leaving users with the option of the web player. The web app works fine, but it means keeping a browser tab open and losing out on system-side niceties like media controls and keyboard shortcuts. Thankfully, TIDAL offer a robust API that, with a bit of open-source […]

You're reading Tonearm, New Unofficial TIDAL Client for Linux, Hits Beta, a blog post from OMG! Ubuntu. Do not reproduce elsewhere without permission.

Firefox’s Tab Notes Feature Feels Genuinely Useful (For Me, At Least)

23 janvier 2026 à 03:21

Firefox logo with a white outline centred on a colourful gradient background.Something has changed in my browsing habits of late, and I’m not sure I like it. I used to be a “if I don’t need it, close it” guy. Now? 25 tabs open – a mix of news articles, code repos, drafts and random stuff I swore I’d revisit… only I don’t remember why. But it seems Firefox has a fix for my forgetfulness in the works: Tab Notes. As the name suggests, Tab Notes are small text notes you can add to any open tab: Accessing them is straightforward: right-click (or hover over) a tab, click ‘add note’, type in […]

You're reading Firefox’s Tab Notes Feature Feels Genuinely Useful (For Me, At Least), a blog post from OMG! Ubuntu. Do not reproduce elsewhere without permission.

14 Years Later than Planned, NexPhone is Up for Preorder

22 janvier 2026 à 02:50

NexPhone is available for pre-order, some 14 years after it was first announced to the world – back then it planned to ship with Ubuntu for Android. Created by Nex Computer, the company behind the NexDock laptop shells, the NexPhone aims to deliver on ambitions that Canonical’s Ubuntu Phone set out to: using your phone as a proper PC when connected to a monitor (aka ‘convergence’). In 2012, the plan was to offer the NexPhone with Ubuntu for Android as its sole OS. This would attach to a range of optional devices to function as a tablet, a laptop or […]

You're reading 14 Years Later than Planned, NexPhone is Up for Preorder, a blog post from OMG! Ubuntu. Do not reproduce elsewhere without permission.

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