Xournal uses GTK - so that not working nicely would be a bummer.
I didn’t know about Steam Deck using plasma - nice!
Xournal uses GTK - so that not working nicely would be a bummer.
I didn’t know about Steam Deck using plasma - nice!
there is also Plasma Mobile (I have no experience with either of those).
I was originally thinking more in the direction of classical desktops in the tablet/2-in1 format.
Does it already integrate with Thunderbird?
There might be a bug in the labeling code here
Looks like I’ll be a believer soon
I like to imagine it as a fake Android CalDAV Client that doesn’t subscribe to a CalDav Server, but instead to a directory that you define. The UI is also based on DAVx5. It doesn’t store iCal-files, but Fossify Calendar allows export of events in iCal.
You can use DecSync!
synchronizes RSS, contacts, calendars, tasks and more without requiring a server
It is quiet easy to set up for Android with DecSync CC
With any Calendar App you like. I enjoy Fossify Calendar.
For PC you can install DecSync-Plugin for Radicale. And then import your Calender’s to any CalDav compatible program.
How does one “fork” a repo like this and then is proud about 100+ contributors he got? I believe they know exactly what they are doing and just don’t care.
Codium or VScode and Signal are not available as Browser Apps afaik. And for Spotify - I rarely use that - but when I do it’s nice to have the songs downloaded wich only exists in the Proton APP Version.
With only Codium, Firefox, Spotify and Signal I get close to 16GB :(
Seemingly an online printing service for stickers and more. So there are tons of alternatives.
Did you had any troubles with the hardware? Did the touchscreen work out of the box and which OS?
done and subscribed :)
a rare case in which >100% is possible
Silence - a Signal fork is actually still quiet decent. Simple and support for encrypted SMS. Which is a fun feature.
I never really noticed performance decrease. But still this is great to know - thank you!
I was thinking about switching fron LaserGRBL to Lightburn becausethey had native Linux support… Guess I’ll keep LaserGRBL + Wine following the guide in this comment
Thank you so much for sharing your insights!