

It doesnt even matter, TTL is only decreased when routing. Ethernet frames have no such concept.
It doesnt even matter, TTL is only decreased when routing. Ethernet frames have no such concept.
Just wait for the trolley to pass and then enable an autoclicker
What should it do instead? I think the only reasonable action would be not showing it if the licence file was changed.
Is this post about Github seemingly detecting an incorrect licence? The project was relicenced in a later commit, so I dont think this behavior is entirely wrong.
Likely yes. See the termux-notification-remove
command from the termux-api
package. (You will need the Termux:API plugin.)
I have a built-in “PDF Viewer” app in my GrapheneOS. (app.grapheneos.pdfviewer
)
Why would banking be an issue? I get that its a target, but I really would expect a bank to take care of their TLS.
Yea, I know, I use it myself. My point is that it is no longer degoogled once you regoogle it.
How is that an exception? Sure, it is sandboxed, but I really do not consider that “degoogled”.
Honestly, no. Whenever I see late notifications its usually on a degoogled phone, so this was just my first guess. Good luck!
In that case, is Google Play Services allowed to run in the background / unrestricted / whatever? It is the means to delivering notifications for most apps.
Do you use Google Play Services or is that a deGoogled Android 13?
I just looked it up on Wikipedia.
The extreme ultraviolet and x-ray radiation from solar flares is absorbed by the daylight side of Earth’s upper atmosphere, in particular the ionosphere, and does not reach the surface.
What else should I know?
I’d be happy with a smartphone equivalent where the differences are similar to command line tools having different syntax.
My point was that I think we have that already. The medium is a touch screen, and apps have over time adapted to that the same way they have to the terminal. Here we scroll by swiping up and down, move between tabs by swiping to the side, etc. All held together by system-wide gesture navigation. And yea, every app does stuff differently, and so does every terminal one.
This only furthers my point, that things could be even better using the same principles, without legacy baggage.
I feel like this is exactly what Google was attempting to do with Material Design: a good, consistent interface / design language. It really was a fairly fresh start using what we learned from the smartphone apps that came before, with the design done intentionally. What do you think they missed?
Another thing to keep in mind is that the terminal is built around text and files, while the GUI is not. You cant expect every problem to be cleanly / ergonomically solve-able inside an Android app, just like you cant expect a good Snapchat / Instagram client in your terminal. There are file manager apps, there are text editors, there are todo lists, but the terminal is just a better platform for some tasks while worse for others.
Well, the fact they emit objects doesn’t really help that much with the user interface. This just means that the standard input and output of commands is (usually) more unified and parse-able. I really like the idea, and have seen multiple attempts at it including PowerShell, however none have reached the level of usability that the good old *NIX shells provide.
Id love to see an open source attempt at it
I really don’t think that the command line is a uniform interface. Every command has its own syntax, its own take on what its switches mean, its own take on regexes/globs and so on. Moving and editing files is something completely different: one is a simple command to move a file elsewhere, the other is a whole experience which replaces the command line with something that looks completely different and is controlled completely differently. What they do have in common is just the medium - the terminal.
Many developers of command line tools try to at least keep a similar design language as the rest of the world, but it is far from perfect. A lot of these interfaces are like they are for mostly historical reasons without proper planning of the user interface, so imho even something like Material Design is already closer to being the “same interface” in the GUI world than the various command line interfaces are.
we can’t simply reuse the command line
We absolutely can and some of us do. I often manage my files, todo list, etc. in Termux. Its not always the best thing to do, but I like that I can keep a consistent interface no matter what device I am using. Its still the same terminal, just on a smaller screen with a worse keyboard.
I mean, it might compress it (Im using Eternity on lemmy.world, no clue if images get compressed on federation or if my client chooses a lower quality).
That red color cant have much better contrast on a less compressed image tho.
I so want this to be true, but dont they produce radio waves?
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