To the best of my knowledge, there isn’t a good FOSS PDF editor.
There’s LibreOffice Draw, but as you said, it messes up the formatting. There’s also Inkscape, but good luck if you have pages of text. You can also try Scribus, but I wouldn’t say it’s good (or intuitive).
If all you want to do is write over a PDF, put (not edit, nor remove) text, formulae, or images, then Xournal++ is very decent.
If I need to edit a PDF, I use (*gags*) Adobe Acrobat running in Wine (with Lutris is very easy). It’s as proprietary and evil as it can be, but it’s good at editing PDFs.
.local
is reserved for mDNS, that’s why I don’t use it. Since it’s reserved, Firefox “knows” that if you type something.local
it shouldn’t search the web.
I’m using Fedora, I know I can edit my hosts file to point to a domain, but I don’t want to do that. I map the domains with a pihole instance, and I’d like to keep the record of domains centralized. Also, editing the hosts file won’t solve the issue with Firefox not pointing to the site.
It’s been the same for me. 2 years ago, when I discovered Lemmy, the platform felt a bit dead. I looked around and there wasn’t much content.
Now with the huge influx of people, Lemmy has seen an unprecedented grow. It’s undoubtedly caused it’s fair share of problems for the communities that were already in existance, although I don’t see that as somerhing bad, just a step in it’s growing process.
Way before the meltdown of Reddit, Lemmy was used mainly by it’s creators and likeminded people. Now it’s become way easier to find interesting content and diverse opinions.
I hope this wave of reddit refugees has given Lemmy the exposure needed to become a useful platform. I just hope that “the bad” of reddit doesn’t come here.
You could try Sci-Hub and LibGen. If you don’t find what you’re looking for, you can always email the authors or other scholars who may have access to the paper you’re interested in. A less alternative site would be arXiv, but it just has preprints.