I agree, but I also know that there are many people with an eye of design and there are other alternatives.
But Markor is my favorite app, especially because it can edit .md files from the filesystem (kinda like Obsidian for mobile but FOSS)
I agree, but I also know that there are many people with an eye of design and there are other alternatives.
But Markor is my favorite app, especially because it can edit .md files from the filesystem (kinda like Obsidian for mobile but FOSS)
...or are furries (though, they are surprisingly rare here)
Markor - A markdown/text editor app. It is frankly not the best in terms of design, but it does have quite a few neat features.
Just wish that firefox Android supports "right clicking" extensions, though.
Right now, extensions that use the right-click context menu to function (e.g. Singlefile) doesn't work that well on Android.
I've also found another client for Android: syncthing tray, which seems to come from a popular client for desktop but it also supports Android.
https://github.com/Martchus/syncthingtray
Personally, I find it a good replacement, though its gui is slightly slower and it does not support all the features that syncthing-fork has.
Nah, they're not just using regular lasers. They use the sun.
Note that you can disable the hibernate shutdown (called fast startup) in windows in the control panel. IIRC it's in control panel > startup > fast startup.
I mean, it could be. Intel integrated graphics don't generally need additional drivers. That said, I have run KDE on stock Kubuntu and Debian and (outside of minor glitches, ofc) rarely had a problem.
That said, it is unfortunate that this only applies to very general spaces or some specific communities. If your interest is even a little too niche, the dedicated communities often feel like a graveyard unfortunately.
Just like a certain great philosopher said, "The sun is a deadly laser"
Does that make it an Australian pizza?
That's not as low as you'd think, to be fair. I've tried to run Kubuntu on a 10 year old laptop with 2 GiB RAM and it worked, if only a little laggy. That being said, it crashes after half an hour without swap. But with swap, it is legitimately daily drivable (as long as you don't run heavy apps, of course).
I'd imagine a distro that's designed to be even more lightweight would be able to handle that.