Oh… Weird. This was on my front page.
And top content in the list.
And now I’m wondering why Firefox is so slow on my pixel 9. Sorry about the necropost!
Oh… Weird. This was on my front page.
And top content in the list.
And now I’m wondering why Firefox is so slow on my pixel 9. Sorry about the necropost!
This was a really useful feature for those no service moments.
Transferring survival manual, or a Bluetooth messenger app has proven imperative before.
Its slow on high end devices too unfortunately
Mullvad is the only VPN provider I know of that hasn’t had a controversy yet. Highly recommend
forcing us to give away our new features for free to companies who don’t have to play by the same rules,
You mean the features you rip off from Samsung and Google each year?
deleted by creator
It had a lot of vulnerabilities iirc
My understanding has always been:
Text Editor: just writes text, no formatting (other than line endings)
Code Editor: A family Text Editors that have additional capabilities such as syntax highlighting. And optionally a plugin or extension ecosystem. (VSCode, vim family, Emacs, even gedit )
IDE: An application that includes Code Editor functionality, but also includes tools for a building on given tech stack. This comes out of the box, are a “part of” the application, are peers to the code editor, and cannot be removed, but can optionally be extended through plugins or extensions.
Thanks for saving me the time!
waits patiently
Ah the American way. Fail to innovate and block out the competition.
Free market ftw
Yeah let’s keep it POSIX
Cant you override the css for your app only? I think that exposes background.
Partially yes. But if I create something myself I can “revisit” the headspace of that portion very easily, like I walked into a room.
Doesn’t work as well on codebases I don’t own fully though.
Personally I find git-credential-manager much easier to use.
It manages Oauth2 for you.
Or ssh keys.
The best way I can describe it is that it lets you access media files on a remote share efficiently.
If you streamed music from windows to your Xbox 360, it’s using the protocol.
If you use Kodi, or Windows Media Player they both use it as well.
Plex I know exposes itself as a UPnP endpoint, so you can “browse” it from Kodi or another media player (that supports UPnP), as if it’s on your device.
Its an open standard and slightly more commonly available than you might realize :)
I was being a bit facetious though. On an architectural level though, it can be reasoned it’s different enough from Chromecast to not be a replacement.
DLNA/UPnP is a direct stream between two devices on your Local network.
Chromecast is more “hey little dongle, here’s a URL, play it”.
So media in the cloud wouldn’t work with DLNA/UPnP
DNLA/UPnP
Don’t we use Galileo now instead?
Curious what Bluetooth chip you have as this was my experience and the several devices and a couple different windows machines
Yep exactly my experience with several Bluetooth headphones.
Fine on my Android as well.
Windows just seems to always struggle with Bluetooth and printers.
This is great to hear. Something I love about GNOME was the login / lock experience.
SDDM felt like shit when used with Unity, and with Pantheon, and with Plasma.
Looking forward to its release.