pairdrop.net maybe?
It’s mainly for local network, but you can do internet transfers.
pairdrop.net maybe?
It’s mainly for local network, but you can do internet transfers.
Bottleneck Bandwidth and Round-trip propagation time (BBR)
What services do you run on FreeBSD? Does using FreeBSD limit you in the number of apps you can have, as most of them target Linux?
Gadgetbridge lets you connect and get data from supported smart or fitness watch without manufacturers app. Completely local.
I hope you don’t mind some questions.
I am curious about selfhosting an instance for a community but am afraid federation will consume too much time/resource/money for a side project.
IPv6 usually have unique IP addresses (non-local) for every device in the network. does that mean it will malicious actors can target a device specifically inside a network?
All available on F-Droid
Anyone know what kind of minimum requirements does it need for reliable performance? I couldn’t find them in their docs.
Translation:
I really liked what I saw in #KDE but due to my habit with .deb packages I think I’ll do better in a distro based on @debian
AFAIK it’s maintained by a group called Ablaze and I think I saw them mention they are university students and opensource enthusiasts in Github discussions.
There are blog posts on their site about changes to their team and leadership. Their blog is in Japanese but I just translate it with Firefox’s inbuilt translator. So I don’t think it’s a single dev.
man reads few comments on the internet.
man takes it literally.
Anxiety sets in
ㄟ(ツ)ㄏ
a tinfoil hat?
I’ve used libre.fm before but it seems the project is not active anymore.
did you read the article?
I’m convinced though that if we want Linux on phones to become an option for everyone, there’s no way around the need for well-integrated support for Android apps
I’ve documented the reverse engineering work on this Github repo, including a very rough step-by-step manual of how to run things.
I was looking for the same thing when I accidentally deleted a video from Google Photos app a month back. I didn’t find any opensource ones, so I ended up using one from the playstore. Tried a few and turned off wifi before opening them, because I was sure they were going to have a lot of ads and generally don’t want anything uploaded without me knowing.
One app worked (I don’t even remember the name), then deleted it right away.
Thanks a lot for the thorough explanation. This is going to be real handy for users on Windows Home. I’m guessing once the server is installed, one can connect to it from any RDP client, without needing the wfreerdp client, right?
I use Remmina on my Linux Mint setup.
So this is an open-source server implementation of Windows RDP which I could install in Windows home builds and access it through RDP access client elsewhere?
I checked through their site and repo, binaries are built here. https://ci.freerdp.com/job/freerdp-nightly-windows/1439/arch=win64,label=vs2017/
But i’m not sure where to start. which one should I download?
Redirector works perfectly on Android.
There are a lot of “open source enthusiasts”, but not enough “open source contributors”
This looks neat. It’ll be sweat it it could get
Will use this instead of Neo for a few days to see how it goes.