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![](https://lemmy.kde.social/pictrs/image/19e6d51f-5131-409e-8990-827d3d29e4d3.png)
Maybe scrcpy is the tool for you then.
Maybe scrcpy is the tool for you then.
There is scrcpy for that and you can launch arbitrary commands from KDE Connect too.
You need a phone, tablet, or other device that’s been rooted.
😦
Syncthing on Android has an option to only sync when on AC battery. The PC client might have a similar option. If not, you could probably configure something similar via systemd or udev under Linux.
I don’t think syncthing has proper means to synchronize contacts or anything else that’s not file-based though.
I use syncthing and prefer it for synchronizing files between my devices.
I’m impressed 🙂
Yeah, that’s a very useful exception.
Operator overloading is adding complexity, making code subtly harder to read. The most important lesson for code is: It should primarily be written to be easy to read by humans because if code is not trash, it will be read way more often than written.
Mostly minor improvement, such as the fossify phone app grouping by date in the call history
I’m avoiding the major search engines. If I really need a search engine, I use DuckDuckGo. Most of the time, search forms of a few websites provide better results. I’ve bookmarked search forms of e.g. wikipedia, Wiktionary, the python docs, Arch Linux wiki, github, dict.leo.org, bug trackers of software I commonly use (such as Mozilla’s bug tracker) and so on. I’m basically using Firefox’s “keyword” search feature in the way DuckDuckGo’s !bang syntax works.
Cross-post: https://lemmy.world/post/17034517