That’s neat. I’ll definitely be taking a look at that.
That’s neat. I’ll definitely be taking a look at that.
What did YAML ever do to you?
The Mac app? That would be great. Only problem is that the plugin ecosystem is centered around macOS, and they use native UI. However, they do have a waitlist for Windows (and iOS).
Something like that is gonna be hard to pull off.
You don’t carry a laptop around while you’re hiking?
Like as in beer? No. Or free as in freedom? Also no.
However, iCloud will give you a large amount of the feature set for a fraction of the price (starts at $0.99/mo) and will likely give privacy not too far from what Proton gives you.
In the end, there’s always a risk with putting any information on the web.
iCloud+ has this too. 50 seems to be the limit.
This might be due to how easy Apple makes it to implement this sort of thing. Even if the app isn’t on the App Store.
On iOS, apps must be on the App Store, which requires being enrolled in the Apple developer program. I imagine developers then make their apps paid to cover this.
This is what AI is for.
i5 4790K and a… 7900 XTX?
Throw in upgradable processors too.
https://mcpelauncher.readthedocs.io/en/latest/getting_started/index.html
Gives a surprisingly good Bedrock experience on Linux and macOS. Just needs you to own the game on the Google Play Store.
It’s likely many users still use Automator (which is from 2005). Removing it could break workflows for many people if removed. There’s a bunch of older apps in macOS like this. The latest version of macOS still has AirPort Utility, for example.
Actually, using a Mac with coconutBattery plugged into an iOS device allows you to see the date the battery was manufactured and the cycle count. I imagine there might be other software to pull this information off an iPhone.
This then raises the question why Apple couldn’t show this information within iOS on older models. It obviously has access to this battery information.
Going a little off-topic, how old is your battery?
I’m sitting at 80% battery health on my 13 Pro, and the battery life definitely reflects that.
This is common with these Linux on Android-based phones. I believe Ubuntu Touch requires you to downgrade to Android 9 in most cases.
Great. Time to update Nginx on my vacuum.
This is my complaint as well. KDE certainly has advantages and neat design ideas, but I always come across some major bugs that make my device unusable.
Definitely not saying GNOME doesn’t have bugs as well though.
Rust is a memory-safe language. So in this case, it could result in more stable software.
No, custom desktop environments and window managers can’t be used. What you’re referring to are applications which simply modify window geometry automatically, which emulates a tiling window manager.
If you’d like a GUI, use Trayscale with it.
The Linux version does not provide a GUI on its own but still makes it super easy to login and manage