bluetuith
is great for managing Bluetooth devices.
bluetuith
is great for managing Bluetooth devices.
I’m curious if anyone else has considered using nushell for these things? Probably not for everything (or to replace one’s shell) but it definitely is simpler for basic tasks.
Brave works well on iOS for this use case.
Very nice, but personally I’d want to see org mode integrate with Typst.
Marp works well if you like Markdown. I cannot, however, speak to things such as transitions (though marp exports to a nice HTML file which includes a PowerPoint-like interface, so I’d imagine it’s possible).
I’m curious how it worked on NixOS. Do you happen to have any Nix config files you can share?
It looked to me to be optional, but yeah I was curious about that too…
This is amazing!
This actually looks like something really interesting, but it doesn’t say whether it’s based on anything, only “rolling release”. Is this immutable Arch?
Ah, ok—was it also immutable like the new one is?
I thought this had already happened?
I remember seeing ads on Steam for SteamOS years ago—wasn’t there a point at which you could download and run it on your own computer? What happened?
Wow! First time seeing this. Anyone using it with a Framework 13? Is there any risk of damaging your system with it?
Muse - Black Holes & Revelations
Joel Nielsen - Black Mesa Soundtrack
Opeth - Blackwater Park
Wow… KDE devs got pretty good taste!
This is really cool, but I find nowadays just looking at LaTeX gives me a headache and reminds me of why I switched to typst.app …
NixOS because it’s easy to understand—I can pop open any .nix file in my config and see exactly what is being set up, so I don’t have to mentally keep track of innumerable imperative changes I would otherwise make to the system, and thus lose track of the entropy over time.
I’m curious why links2
over, say, w3m
?
It feels like none of the terminal browsers are as nice as they could be these days…
🥳
Been looking forward to this for a long time—K-9 Mail is an excellent mail client, but this is one step closer to Desktop/Mobile sync.
Just curious—what accessibility extensions do you use on desktop?
I’ve used it for uni on a Linux tablet/convertible and it worked really quite well and has some nice convenient features for note-taking.
What tablet did you use?
I really wish there was a minimal, command-line alternative to Zotero. Zotero, as it is, is great for most people, but it really slows down after a few hundred entries, and the GUI doesn’t seem necessary for all that it does.