I use Gthumb for simple edits (croping, resizing, rotating…).
Also on Mastodon: @pedroapero@mastodon.top
Want to send me a tip? XMR:89oiUKyACFZ655sTikh42RF8wpd46EQDmbTQUQiHHRWFEatjp5xxj4tZBhMMfjC4X45qvq4EdEGXkBsdxT1kP9xyVia8mPD
I use Gthumb for simple edits (croping, resizing, rotating…).
I uninstalled it quickly after finding out it was trialware (missing features; popups to pay)
They went as far as producing fake documents to cover up their embezzlement, and got busted…
I’m fine with Rofi. I’ve used xfce4-appfinder also, it’s less minimal, not configurable (good graphical defaults, might be what you want).
I guess if the copyright trolls got their way, there would be no general purpose computing.
Exactly. These kinds of statements are so naive.
Looking at comments outside of Lemmy, I’m appaled by the number of people shocked by this already. Apparently, “just reuse your f-ing bags” is already too hard for a lot of people. We need to start from the easiest.
If the rocket explosion can create a 60 meters wide crater, my guess is it can still at least crack open the fission part and spill the material in the atmosphere.
I use BTRFS for the same. Being able to check for and repair silent corruptions is a must (and this is without needing to read the whole drives, only the actual files). I’ve had a lot of them over the years, including (but not only) because of a cheap USB controller also.
Every Door
thank you for sharing, definitely the easiest for Android from my research :-)
Note: there is a comparison of editor apps here: https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Comparison_of_editors
The feature looks made ugly on purpose though (compared to organic maps where you can just download the whole country or select more precisely what you want)
the Android VLC is absolutely different from the desktop version.
Hi, thanks a lot, I’ll sure try them both!
Shazam (or equivalent)
Remove the dot at the end of the link: https://odysee.com/@jopec:7/linus-tech-tips-degoogle-your-life-part-2-adfree-youtube:0
This statement was later retracted. The Engadget article was redacted accordingly.
Unfortunately we are at a point where Cisco Cloudflare and Google are held liable for filesharing-related domains their DNS relays are resolving IPs for…
No, every service provider must remove infringing content when reported. That is not the case on Telegram.
No matter which encoding is used to store data, the hoster is still responsible for it. On mega, the data is encrypted, yet mega is still held responsible for removing content reported by copyright holders (the decryption keys being included in reports).
How come those big hosters get away with such infringements? I guess they must be less popular than Megaupload and such
my favourite is Amazon’s:
exept you must pay amazon prime 10$ and it’s a monthly recuring subscription.