Well that’s great news! I joined the wait-list last week and got an email saying they’d get back to me when I could get access.
Came from Reddit after the API pricing fiasco. IT systems administrator, lover of card, board, dice, tabletop, and video games, anime and manga, mechanical keyboards, and organizational development.
Well that’s great news! I joined the wait-list last week and got an email saying they’d get back to me when I could get access.
I was unaware that it was supposed to transfer chat history. It’s never once done it for me. I assumed it was like other platforms I’ve used where it doesn’t sync your history unless you backup and restore.
Beeper looks amazing but is waiting list only.
I’m curious what do you find horrible about it? I use it all the time and have zero issues with it.
On a <5 minute video?
DP has embedded, can be carried over USB-C, allowing for everything to be handled over a single cable, is handled on connector instead of device-internal interface allowing for smaller/thinner devices, DP daisy-chaining, licensing/royalty differences, etc.
My brother-in-law just bought some pants from Costco that we wore golfing with us the other day and they looked great. He said they were $15 USD and super comfortable. So maybe there’s good stuff sometimes? Wouldn’t know, don’t have a Costco membership because there isn’t one near us.
Yeah it’s definitely a chore to get anyone to use anything other than iMessage. A few friends and I use Signal even though they have iMessage and loved it. But everyone else is hooked to iMessage. Convenience is King in terms of adoption, unfortunately.
As someone who has to administer several hundred Windows servers and several thousand Windows workstations in our fleet (alongside our Linux and Mac systems), I was very sad that winget was not as good as I had hoped for. Chocolatey is still far better IMO, and neither is anywhere near as good as apt, rpm, etc.
• git
• vim
• openssh
• openssl
• fail2ban
• curl
• byobu
• webmin (to give limited access to non-Linux help desk technicians)
I love OpenRGB. It’s such a fast and lightweight alternative to Corsair iCUE, which is needlessly heavy, clunky, and resource-intensive just to tell your lights what color to be.
Most welcome!
but i kinda want a native app tho. but oh well, most “native” apps these days are just PWAs in an electron powered trench coat so id maybe it wont be as bad as im imagining rn
I also want a native app, and have had a similar experience with many PWAs, however this one feels pretty dang good. So at least there’s that!
You are most welcome! Yeah it’s pretty much a rip of Apollo. I’m hoping the Apollo dev might look into a Lemmy app down the road, kind of the like Sync Pro developers are, but in any case, this PWA has been pretty good to me thus far!
If you haven’t already, check out this PWA that is extremely Apollo-like!
I am super excited to have a Sync client for Lemmy. In the meantime the PWA WefWef is pretty dang good.
I started with Jerboa and just would WefWef today. Game changer! Loving it.
I saw this the other evening and played it. Man, it went from 0-100 real quick. Really wild little game!
I’ll give a search on Duck Duck Go, and if I can’t find what I need then I’ll use Google.
But at this point I’m using Google Bard and ChatGPT more and more, at least at work.
Oh, man. Getting that kind of stuff in writing is soooo good. * chef’s kiss *
I wish. Both at home and in the office, we rely on too many Windows-dependent applications that do not work on Linux.
I run Ubuntu as my main OS since I can kinda do what I want with my laptop at work and obviously control my personal laptop as well, but everything production-wise at work is Windows on the client side, and I still have a Windows PC for gaming for games that require anti cheat that isn’t supported on Linux.
I vastly prefer Linux but Windows is a far lower friction/barrier to entry for most.