Do most smart TVs still allow performing updates via USB? I have an older LG TV which does this.
Do most smart TVs still allow performing updates via USB? I have an older LG TV which does this.
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
I dunno what you’re talking about. Stock dialer has it for me.
Bad jokes aside, is this really not a standard feature? I would’ve thought this would’ve been more common.
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.
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.
i5 4790K and a… 7900 XTX?
Funnily enough, I’ve got a pretty well-loved ThinkPad T480 16 GB 8350U sitting right here. Used to be my main development laptop. Now it’s just an agent for Portainer.
Right. I was just thinking more like the Intel pre-Haswell era. Still haven’t gotten used to the idea of an SoC being in a laptop.
Nativefier was great. I recall that project struggling at the end really needing funding.
Throw in upgradable processors too.
There’s nothing wrong with the software itself. It works great for what it does. On the other hand, it’s a compatibility layer, which always increases friction between things a little. I think the best use for this is running legacy software.
There aren’t many alternatives. Maybe in the future, we’ll see graphics API abstraction libraries like wgpu get used more. This gives developers a single API which can use DirectX on Windows, Vulkan on Linux, or Metal on macOS. This could allow support for entirely new graphics APIs without developers using it having to do anything.
Of course, that’s my opinion. People can build their software how they like.
Until you actually try to use Vulkan on macOS. Since there’s no native support, you end up needing MoltenVK.
You’re telling me you don’t want to update a configuration that updates a configuration that updates a configuration?
Just wait until you use Ubuntu cloud-init
which updates netplan
which then updates NetworkManager
.
Have an update that completely breaks everything on your system? Just revert to the previous image and it’s no problem.
These immutable distros have so much potential. Especially for the tech illiterate. I really encourage anyone who hasn’t yet to give them a shot.
Of course they aren’t for everybody, as it makes it far harder to make system-level changes on the local system.
I haven’t used Waydroid in a while, but I recall there being an image you could choose at setup for Google Services.
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.
This is common with these Linux on Android-based phones. I believe Ubuntu Touch requires you to downgrade to Android 9 in most cases.
I believe the iOS Mail app is getting a UI redesign before the end of the year.