Take a look at some of the templates available at Overleaf: https://www.overleaf.com/latex/templates
I don’t have a link to it right now, but I use LaTeX to format my CV. It makes it much easier to add new sections and keep everything consistent.
Take a look at some of the templates available at Overleaf: https://www.overleaf.com/latex/templates
I don’t have a link to it right now, but I use LaTeX to format my CV. It makes it much easier to add new sections and keep everything consistent.
Yes, but without an external app.
Sorta. Twitter has a more “passive” type of interaction that is different from normal chats, which tend to be more “active” (you have a bigger expectation of replying).
But I’m not gonna complain too much since I can use this a reason to use Twitter even less.
Pretty bummed about this news, I’m gonna miss it. Sometimes you want to post something just for some of your closest mates and this was perfect for that.
It’s really good to see this spreading to more manufacturers (although I’m not sure if this will also apply to their lower range devices). Especially because even though your OS updates may be capped at 4 years, you will still receive app updates for 2+ more years, including system apps. As opposed to iOS, where your system apps stop at your last update and developers bump minimum OS versions quite quickly.
As @8orange8@lemm.ee said (https://lemmy.ml/comment/3459977), I believe they have different use cases. The TL;DR is: syncthing to have the same copy of a file across different devices, LocalSend to move files between devices directly.
On syncthing you have to upload the file to the synced folder and then download the file to your device, so like device A -> server -> device B
.
Whereas on LocalSend you send the file directly between the devices, like device A -> device B
.
In this case what I meant to say is that I practically don’t have issues anymore. Apologies if it sounded confusing, English is not my first language.
LocalSend has been a godsend (pun intended) to me. I used Snapdrop/Sharedrop before, but it was always a coin toss if the transfer would work or not. I ended up switching to filedrop, but for some reason my transfer speeds were really low.
With LocalSend my issues have been all but resolved. I can send huge files between my pc and phone without fear of it disconnecting, and it works on my pc, old notebook, my dad’s iPhone and my android phone. I really can’t thank Tienisto (the creator) enough for what he built.
The phone is Hi-Res Audio and Dolby certified, but doesn’t have a wired 3.5mm headphone jack.
In my country, they are mostly coming from less tech-literate users. I have seen:
And many more colorful things.
GSMARENA Phone Finder is pretty amazing. You can filter by basically any phone characteristic you want. Back material? Yep. Refresh rate? Also yes. Proximity sensor? You got it. Minimum wired charging wattage? Sure, why not.
I’ve yet to find a more comprehensive one.
Edit: taking a look at Kimovil. It seems like it has much of the same filters as Phone Finder, but with the bonus of also showing price, which is nice.
Sadly, I don’t think so. From what I could gather, it’s just a local app.
I made a comment about this some time ago:
I came across GreenStash sometime ago.
If it’s not what you are looking for, take a look at the “Expense Managers” section here. It lists both FOSS and proprietary apps.
Take a look in this thread: https://feddit.nl/post/1428354
Pocket Casts recently open-sourced both their android and iOS apps:
But the backend is still closed-source.
Tried looking with my account, but the link just goes to a 404
I think OP is mixing up IRC and Matrix. IRC indeed does require you to be online to receive messages (but there are ways around that), but matrix loads your messages offline just fine.
Checked it now and I have 3k unread messages on the lemmy support chart.
Do you have the “Google Search Fixer” add-on? If so, it’s a known issue. Until it’s fixed, do not click any images on the first page, only after changing to the “images” category.
Go to your whatsapp settings and then “chats”. On the bottom you should have 2 options “Transfer to android” and “Transfer to iPhone”. Choose the first one and it should show you the instructions on how to proceed.
Sadly, I can’t say if it works without a cable since I have never done it this way.
It’s the opposite. As per the article, daily users remained consistent while monthly users saw the 13% drop.