

if you have the app/feature on both devices, QuickShare.
on Linux, there’s RQuickShare, which lets you use QuickShare on Linux


if you have the app/feature on both devices, QuickShare.
on Linux, there’s RQuickShare, which lets you use QuickShare on Linux


bluetooth would obv. be slower, but it’s fine for small files imo. you definately start to feel the slowness on large files or a large amount of files (each one is its own transfer, and from experience, I feel that it would have gone faster on WiFi.)
Ahhh. That clears some things up. Thank you! :)
I thought the Imgur thing on reddit was optional? like, you could upload directly. Do they use it as a backend or something? Am I missing something?
l was browsing around on r/kde sometimes, and there was a banner-thing Saying that KDE Supported open platforms like Lemmy. I took a look at Lemmy’s Wikipedia, and browsed around a few days later. I liked the stuff on c/programmerhumour, So I joined.
Also my Reddit account got banned (i think, might be deactivated, idk) due to inactivity (I wasn’t on for 2-3 years), and I didn’t care to do anything about it.
Also, as a bit of context for the above, it did take a while from hearing about Lemmy and browsing and joining.


That sounds really cool/ interesting! Keeping the bendy-ness/ rubbery-ness in mind, would you say that it could be a TPU/ PETG (certain types) alternative?
Yeah, that honestly sucks, sometimes I just want/ need someone to talk to.


Yes, but I don’t normally program in python, so I never did. When I had to, I never thought of changing it (it wasn’t for long anyways and was less of a thought out decision to do programming in vim)


“biodegradable”. For PLA Plastics, they are only biodegradable under commercial composting environments (CNC Kitchen made a video about it). For other things, I think it is mostly the same (CBC Made a video on this too (they looked at plastic alternatives though, and the duration of their testing was a bit short))


This is the one thing I hate about python, because the spacing would differ between editors. I used vim to create the files on one system, and geany to edit them on another. Via uses 8 spaces in a tab (at least for me), while geany uses 4. This makes python mad, and drives me crazy.
Also, the rules for whitespace separation between things like loops, methods, and the rest of the code is annoying/ wierd (at least to me).


ImoI, that just sucks. I don’t want to turn into a walking advertisement for a company.


Ahhh. I see. I thought it was off by default (reading through these comments, I now realize that it is probably on by default). I can’t remember the default state either, nor if I manually turned it off.


OS: Debian (Trixie)
DE: KDE Plasma
I use vim for light edits. Currently using VSCodium, but am slowly trying out Kate. I use codeberg as Version Control, and Konsole as the terminal.
I also have notepadqq (a native alternative to notepad++), but prefer vim and am also trying to switch to Kate.


Do the processes still run even if you toggle the setting off?


Yeah, I’m just glad that it’s opt-in. I don’t find the option/ notion very palatable.


+1 for Wendover, Half As Interesting, Real Engineering, Mustard, and Mentour Pilot.
Love those channels. Can somehow keep me engaged enough to watch a few hours of content on some random stuff. :)
Check if it’s not important, then delete


Paint.net, unfortunately, is a Windows-only software. For Linux, I’d recommend something like Lazpaint. It’s pretty close feature-wise, and I believe that it supports plugins.
for Windows and Linux, pair the Linux machine from Windows, or Windows will pair it as an audio device and you won’t be able to share files.