

I mean if it’s local network I’d use kde connect. It has a bazillion features, but sending files through the normal share button is one of them.
I mean if it’s local network I’d use kde connect. It has a bazillion features, but sending files through the normal share button is one of them.
Or newpipe… Or pipepipe.
They didn’t say anything about not removing pixels from the tree, which is what people are complaining about. So yeah, they pretty much did.
Sure… Just the Pixel project is discontinued.
For a first release, it already comes with a bunch of changes. How many people moved to the fork, is it all of the devs there now?
Other influential moments should include jump in my horse.
Any recommendations for the contacts app?
Which other games did they adapt… Poorly?
It’s…kinda like a VM? But without the VM part. It runs in a container, AFAIK, so it’s using a lot less resources than a full blown VM. It works for a lot of apps. And the ARM emulation plugin helps a lot, too. But then again, I usually stick to mostly FOSS apps, and refuse to install the gapps suite. So, no Play Store. I can still install apps via Aurora, but there’s a problem there between Waydroid and Aurora, which leads to frequent crashes (of Aurora) when trying to install an app. But once the app is installed (you can download it by other means, and just install it into waydroid by running something like ‘waydroid app install myfile.apk’.
Yup…and Google has failed to have a competitive alternative since. Does it still work for Samsung? I mean, full blown monitor via USB. I think they removed several features at some point (like forcing it to work only via wireless/miracast or something) after the S10 (the best phone they’ve made IMHO).
I think people are missing the bigger picture (heh) here. The use case for this would be to hook your phone to a USB-HDMI or DP cable adapter thingamagig, and then using your phone on a monitor as a full blown desktop computer. Google nerfed this feature on purpose, leaving it only to work on tablets.
Wow this one looks major, and possibly disruptive.
You mean…waydroid? It’s literally a translation layer running on a container, AFAIK. Then you can add an additional ARM emulation plugin for specific apps that don’t have x86 versions.
KDE includes now a default option in their settings to do this. It’s in the Colors & Themes > Night Light menu.