[-] bruce965@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 months ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

There is a keyboard shortcut. It's CTRL+ALT+Z for me. Unless you mean something else?

As for the "reveal on hover", iirc there was a dismissable message that said it is coming soon.

If I can share my opinion, they are more than big enough if you toggle the checkbox "optimize for touch screen". I would have to try Arc or Zen again to understand what you mean.

The only complaint I have is that I need to hover (or expand) to see the title. It becomes annoying when I'm reading documentation and I end up with multiple tabs with the same icon.

EDIT: I can't seem to find the "optimize for touch screen" checkbox anymore, but I'm sure there is something like that somewhere because I enabled it on one of my devices which has a touch screen.

EDIT 2: the "optimize for touch screen" option can be seen by right clicking the toolbar and choosing "Customize toolbar". Changing the density to "Touch" (on the bottom) makes these icons bigger.

[-] bruce965@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 months ago

Well... if a FOSS project wants to incorporate collaborative work they could already do it, well... through Matrix for instance.

They might (depending on how the application works) also need to implement additive changes and possibly also a conflict resolution UI if they want to support synchronization from offline changes. But I'm afraid both these things might be very application-specific.

I'll be honest, I don't think much of what I have in mind would really be adoptable by existing projects. But I'll do my best to keep everything relatively modular just in case.

Thanks (again) for the encouragement!

[-] bruce965@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 months ago

That's a good idea and it shouldn't be too difficult, especially as it wouldn't even really need collaboration. If I manage to get this thing started I'll try to add this suggestion to the list of apps. Thanks!

[-] bruce965@lemmy.ml 1 points 6 months ago

Well... that would make sense. But it's much much easier to just do it preemptively. The browser API to check how much memory is available are quite limited afaik. Also if there are too many elements the browser will have to do more work when interacting with the page (i.e. on every rendered frame), thus wasting slightly more power and in a extreme cases even lagging.

For what it's worth, I, as a web developer, have done it too in a couple occasions (in my case it was absolutely necessary when working with a 10K × 10K table, way above what a browser is designed to handle).

[-] bruce965@lemmy.ml 1 points 7 months ago

Google Translate allows you to run translations offline from the Android app.

Mozilla Firefox also comes with a beta offline translation engine. AI based, but since it's offline you can rest assured that it won't burn a small forest for every query. It's pretty good, albeit limited to a handful of languages.

[-] bruce965@lemmy.ml 1 points 9 months ago

I'm definitely no expert so I might not be the best person to try and help, but if you want to try having a 1 on 1 chat to fix it, feel free to send me a PM.

[-] bruce965@lemmy.ml 1 points 9 months ago

If it makes sense for your software, please consider giving it a web interface and turning it into a localhost-only web-service.

[-] bruce965@lemmy.ml 1 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

I thought so. Although almost nothing for modern standards, 60MB is not exactly tiny. Sorry about that.

On a different note, a repository is always a good thing imho. If you'd rather not have to worry about the dependency-pull step you can always include the dependencies with your sources, or just limit your code to using features included in the standard library.

[-] bruce965@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 year ago

Fair enough, I agree with most of the things you said. The one I got is made of aluminum and doesn't feel cheap/thin at all, I guess they have both cheap and "professional" options. Personally I wasn't looking for something really unique, just for something that had a decent performance for a laptop and works well with Linux. I searched around and this model ticked all my most important boxes.

I don't know whether Clevo engineers throught about Linux when they designed the device or not, but I can say after configuring it properly, it works without any flaws.

As for buying straight from China, I consider the idea, but at the time I didn't find a way to buy it for cheaper than buying from a reseller. I'm in Europe, perhaps in the US or in Asia it would be different.

[-] bruce965@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 year ago

That's very likely the case, but I'd say it makes little difference: any self-hosted application supporting web technology is also a desktop application.

[-] bruce965@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 year ago

Ah right, that makes sense. Today I learned.

[-] bruce965@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

Sorry about the delay.

  1. Install Rethink Firewall and follow instructions to configure it;
  2. In "Apps" set Gboard to "Isolate";
  3. Add two domain rules for the two Tenor domains as "Trust".

That's all.

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bruce965

joined 3 years ago