I don’t iron my t-shirts, so I’m not going to start ironing my phone.
Or Yoda is a Forth programmer.
The USCIS site makes it clear that your CAN use emojis in your password.
ETA: but not required.
And how about archive.org ?
Imagine Software had made a name for itself, too. It was reasonable to see that name and expect some quality.
Why not the black ones?
Power over ethernet + ethernet over wifi
== Wireless power transmission!
The IT Crowd is boosted by having a quote that’s genuinely a best first-response to IT problems.
Ooh, I’ve thought of one: a helium balloon. Imagine the tension as he occasionally forgets to hold the string!
Can I just suggest that to mix things up a bit, this one should be set on a peninsula.
I bought a PC kit and it said “some assembly required” so I always try to link at least one asm file in my projects.
I’ve seen a collection plate with a tap-to-pay terminal so that would make it more difficult.
I always go for sprung hinges with Zenni. I’ve never need to tighten the screws with those.
Used them for years with no issue and get lots of pairs for distance, reading, daytime driving (polarized sunglasses bifocals so no glare and I can see the instruments), etc.
Syncthing seems to be a good way to get real-time two-way sync so far, but I’ve had a few accidents while setting it up, overwriting latest changes. Probably my fault, but I’m glad that I have backups to other machines.
I tried owncloud years ago and I didn’t want something that heavyweight for file syncing. And I think it stores a copy of all it’s days in a database too. I just want to sync files in-place only. I haven’t tried that or nextcloud in a long time.
I’ve always preferred it to similar programs, it’s a really good balance of easy to use viewer and those basic editing features that you mention. Really good for printing, too, you can specify size and/or position on a page.
My current plan is to use SyncThing on the phones and on a linux PC. I’ve set up Obsidian to use a directory locally on the phone (Open Folder As Vault) and use SyncThing to sync that with the PC. As this is only a recent test, I’m still using resilio to sync that dir to other PCs such as my laptop. I just added to a note on my phone and it appeared in Obsidian on my laptop a few seconds later, despite two different syncs being involved.
I’d commented about bugs such as the sync percentage being stuck at 91%, but on reading up on it more, that’s due to a mis-match of ignored files (the ignore patters were the same, but it was still indicating that the files did not match between the two devices).
So my thoughts still stand that SyncThing has a lot of things to set up manually (e.g. it doesn’t automaticall sync between all peers) and the mobile app is strange for having two different UIs, but it looks like as I understand it better I’m happier to keep using it.
If I find that the Resilio phone app is better on battery life, I might switch back to that because I use resilio everywhere else and it’s simpler to set up (and I like that it archives old versions of files for a while).
I’m not familiar with Folder Sync.
I prefer resilio because it seems more straightforward to set up. Add a shared folder to it, then it can provide a code to sync that folder to other machines. Then all the peers can sync files from any of the other peers. (I actually use to paid version, so that adding a new folder becomes available to sync everywhere).
I’ve recently tried SyncThing and first I accidentally created separate sync folders with the same name on different devices. I also didn’t realize that I had to set up which peers to sync with on each device, so some files did not sync to one phone because it only synced with a laptop that was offline. Also, the mobile app is limited until you use the “open web view” option that views a web page allowing more features to be edited (e.g. I could not change a folder to be bi-directional syncing on a phone and kept having it overwrite files with old ones until I found that setting).
However, last time I tried the resilio phone app (admittedly a few years ago), it worked by pollng for changes which drained the battery. Synching has not done that, it probably uses change notifications. So, despite the more confusing setup, I’ve started using syncthing for syncing to phones. Once I’ve become more familiar with it, maybe I’ll be happier to use it more.
But so far, in my limited experience syncthing is a little buggy - I’ve just checked my phone now and it’s just stuck on “syncing 91%” for the one small folder that I’m using. And the mobile app having two different interfaces is a strange choice.
This sort of problem, btw, is why I mentioned installing winmerge! It’s a great tool for sorting out merge conflicts in files.
I can use a computer mouse with either hand (including using 3d editors, when you might need to do something like alt-middle+left button drag).
I was getting pain in my right hand from working, so I just tried switching until I got used to it.
Someone called me ambi-mousetrous.
A LOT of people see a mouse on the left of the keyboard and ask what should be a rhetorical question: “are you left-handed”, to which I’d reply “no”.