Haha, love the Microsoft joke. Very accurate
Another related one https://xkcd.com/2501/
Lately I’ve been enjoying !shittyfoodporn@lemmy.ca and !okmatewanker@feddit.uk
!okmatewanker@feddit.uk won’t amused by this post
Is this the one with the competing standards? Are we having a meta meme now?
Duracell should rebrand.
The big ones: Durcell, and Curcell
Oh, snapdrop is back? The site has been unreachable for years to me
God damnit. How is this not tagged NSFW? That unicorn is definitely not safe for work
Just fooling around here. I’m completely with you
deleted by creator
I guess, the browser is kind of the replacement for the OS in OP’s case, which is again, a nonfree OS/browser.
AFAIK macOS doesn’t care if you add another partition in diskutil and install Linux on that through the usual live ISO’s. But please make sure you:
Haven’t clicked mine in ages. Does it still work?
myList = list(
78,
99,
15,
78,
03,
22,
12,
73
)
to be fair, the first colour picker isn’t too bad, it it?
Answering the question you meant to ask, blueray is a physica… just kidding.
LocalSend is basically like bluetooth file sharing over WiFi. Bluetooth, especially the fallback 2.0 is notoriously slow and short ranged. The situation got better with BLE, 5.0 and Long Range. Still, both devices need to speak BT. Ap*le’s iOS is well known to ignore BT file sharing capabilities while implementing own proprietary solutions. On desktop, the situation is still bad. I once tried to send a file between two Windows machines via BT, and it was a horrible user experience. LocalSend (and similar) fix this by implementing cross platform apps and using readily available API’s to share files with few clicks and reasonably high speed between a plethora of devices. I guess, if you don’t have the aforementioned problems, you won’t need LocalSend et al.
Really great software. Works like a charm most of the time, the apps are quite okay, sends files locally. The first low-barrier solution to share stuff between wildly different devices since e-mail.
Who could’ve thought in 1981 that more than a few thosand universities would ever like to connect to the then 250 machines big ARPANET. With 4 billion addresses, there was plenty of headroom at the time.
In 50 years, when the last ISP finally switches to IPv6, we’ll be wondering how short sighted we were as now every pencil has an IP address in the interplanetary compu-global-hyper-meganet.