I can’t think of any reason the backend can’t be open-source too.
I can’t think of any reason the backend can’t be open-source too.
I missed the word “server” every time and thought it was a client, and spent far too long trying to figure out how you’d play Minecraft in Bash. Text based? ASCII graphics?
I started banking with them in 2011, I think, on recommendation from friends. I’ve continued to use them because of my satisfaction with the things you’ve mentioned as well as the services they make available through the site and app. (It’s USAA, for reference).
I am a millenial.
Nobody is stopping you from copy-pasting the third clause into the two-clause plus patent license.
What are you trying to accomplish with the patent thing? Have you already patented your software?
There are a bunch of APIs, actually. Plaid is a pretty popular one. The problem is getting the banks to implement them.
But people definitely choose banks because of their apps. For example, my bank doesn’t have any physical branches in my area, so I do everything through the website or app. Remote check deposit through my phone camera, for example.
No need under Windows either. Hasn’t been since Windows 98.
Unlikely. I’ve used this with moderate success when I needed to run two Discord accounts: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.oasisfeng.island
But I think it partially just uses the builtin Android profiles functionality.
But why would I want my emails also to go through the spyware OS
Beats me, but you’re the one using Windows, so…
If your email provider offers a webmail client, then you might give that a shot, though it’s still going to run under Windows.
That doesn’t have anything to do with whether it’s open-source or not.