The link right here goes to 40:02 of Proton’ boss on the TLE channel about Linux support, where a Drive Client is deemed so difficult to achieve that they don’t even have a roadmap for it. Nor is the word “Linux” featured anywhere on proton’s pages about Drive.

coughdropboxcough

If I believe what I see on Lemmy, 99% of users here are on Linux, and the 1% remaining probably are just waiting on a Drive Linux Client to make the switch, right? Right?

Please take the survey and maybe mention politely our deep sorrow and profound distress.

https://form.typeform.com/to/L0UNpRar

The accompanying message says “Limited submissions. Respond now to ensure your voice is heard.”

Let’s go! Thanks!

  • @pathief
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    37 months ago

    Proton supports Wireguard on Windows for several years now.

      • ReallyZenOP
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        17 months ago

        If you use the config file generator from the Proton website, you can have a Wiregard config tailor-made to load in NetworkManager for instance. Or several with or without NAT, different exits and so on.

        I don’t know how this isn’t widely known, it’s been there for a while.

        • @pathief
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          27 months ago

          I know about this but it sucks for several reasons:

          • This doesn’t use the proton vpn client

          • You need to setup configuration files for each country you wish to connect

          • You configure a server directly, you can’t just connect to “France” and have the client choose the server with the least load

          • You can no longer select a random country, you have to introduce the randomness yourself

          • You have to manage configurations like kill switches on your own, since you’re no longer using the proton client

          It’s certainly a viable option, but why must linux users have all these drawbacks? :|