No, sorry. Copyq ist available for Linux+windows, previously I used Comfort Clipboard Pro on windows only.
Moved from Scratch2003@feddit.de
No, sorry. Copyq ist available for Linux+windows, previously I used Comfort Clipboard Pro on windows only.
Copyq clipboard manager
But it is a good example of inconvenience. One day they decided well, we’re closing shop. And that made it pretty clear for users that they didn’t own the music.
Oh, I forgot one thing:
sorry, but it wasn’t you who did it.
This sounds like you want to prove something. That you can do it better than the maintainers of the library. That you can solve hard problems on your own instead of relying on other people.
That’s all great and sometimes it’s good to do hard things on your own and make sure you could do it just in case. But it’s not always necessary to do everything yourself and learn every lesson yourself. It’s a valid way to build on knowledge and work of others to achieve your goals.
This assumes that I could implement something as well as the maintainers of the library I use. I agree that something trivially should be implemented on your own, but if there is special knowledge required (the obvious example is cryptography, but also something like HTTP requests) I rather rely on a widely used library than my own code that I now have to maintain and check for security issues instead of just updating the dependency version whenever a CVE is published.
Also if there is. A client by an API provider for my language, why shouldn’t I use it instead of rolling my own?
Another example is a framework like React or Angular or Svelte, which brings along a whole lot of dependencies. Sure, I could not use something like that and write everything from scratch.
But where is the value of all that code to customers? If I want to roll my own HTTP server up from the sockets, I can do that as a play project. But not using libraries for a real world project to solve business needs is a bit of an odd take.
Anyways, that’s enough of a rant. Have fun in the replies. 😎
Can’t find the info in the repository. Can I share a collection or specific links via RSS? I built my own application to archive URLs and grab the text content, and I also build a RSS feed from that. Can Linkwarden do something similar?
I’m using Notion for everything now. I heavily rely on reminders scattered everywhere because Todo lists don’t work for me.
This will be the first day in years I will try to make gaming work on Linux once again.
Does Pro not do this type of shit? I can’t really remember when I saw onedrive after my initial deactivation and uninstall spree on my machine…