Me, apparently. I didn't know these were called metaballs :P
I didn't understand that you ran it without hardware virtualization. This is really convenient, thanks a lot for making it!
As far as I understand, you only have to make your changes to the code available to users of your software. You are free to make any modifications as long as you keep them to yourself and don't share the binaries (or access the service, in case of AGPL) with anyone. I might be mistaken, though.
Are you sure about that? That would be surprising for me, as I had never before heard about Electron running on mobile.
A quick dive in Element Android's dependencies didn't reveal any mentions of Electron, but perhaps it's referenced in some other way.
Could you describe the kind of glitches you are getting?
As a first test (and only as a test) I would try holding space bar during boot, then pressing E while focusing the Pop!_OS option, and removing quiet and splash from the line on the bottom, then pressing enter to boot.
In my very limited experience, when this happens the filesystem can (and will) still be mounted as read-only.
I have one. It does the bare minimum (show time, count steps, show notifications), everything else doesn't work very well, including the heart monitor. But the battery lasts for almost a month. And it's completely offline, no cloud services. I would still recommend it.
That's interesting. I wanted to try it not long ago, and downloaded a random build which didn't complete installation unfortunately. I'm not a good at searching I guess 😅 How did you distinguish it from the others?
EDIT: found it here.
You will have to "await" the next frame after disabling the buttons, then take the screenshot and re-enable the buttons.
Otherwise you might be able to get the same effect by putting the buttons on a separate layer and excluding it from the screenshot (not sure if it's actually possible this way, but I strongly suppose so).
There is a node that keeps cameras synchronized, I can't recall the name right now, but it's something like "RemotePosition3D".
As for the lights, it's a matter of configuring the layers correctly and disabling "own world" on the viewport.
It's an application that runs in the background and applies all sorts of filters and effects to your sound before it goes to the speakers. It's actually quite cool, it can upgrade a crappy set of speakers/headphones to a mediocre one by applying the right adjustments.
GrapheneOS is certainly on my wishlist too, but Pixels are quite pricey. I guess Rethink is the poor man's version. Just a per-app firewall.