The notification stays on in the background and allows you to tap it whenever you need an instant recognition…
You read the name. You know what I am.
The notification stays on in the background and allows you to tap it whenever you need an instant recognition…
They’re free for now because the API they use is in beta… We don’t know if it’ll remain free.
Welcome 😁. That’s how most of us started.
On my Android: Fossify Gallery & Calendar, Thunderbird Mail, Eternity for Lemmy, AntennaPod, OSS Document Scanner, FUTO Keyboard, Gallery, KDE Connect, Moshidon (client for Mastodon), Next Player, Obtainium, (I wanted to have Logseq but I prefer Obsidian so I left it out), Swift Notes (I’m trying to get into).
On my Windows laptop: OnlyOffice Suite, Betterbird (Thunderbird, but better), FluentCast Podcast Player, FluentWeather, GIMP, Inkscape, KDE Connect, (I wanted to have Logseq but I prefer Obsidian so I left it out), Screenbox (VLC but modern and sexy), QuickLook, ShareX, Tenacity (Audacity fork that apparently is less controversial or something).
As someone who needs a photo viewer that has some basic editing tools, is digiKam a good tool? I’ve tried it in the past to mixed results… The UI and UX leaves a lot to be desired, but I do like the fact that it has local face recognition and other interesting features.
Any suggestions for how this could be a part of my use-case?
Fair enough. But email is the most pervasive example we can use today tbh.
I’m in my mid-20s… I’m the last of the generation of people who know that there’s more than just Gmail and Outlook. The fact that Outlook is actually a client as well as a host is something people might not even know today.
I did this and he just said, “so it’s like email servers, but for more than emails?” I can’t believe this is the best way to put it.
Market it properly. I’ll watch. The way they marketed movies like Transformers One, or the utter failure that was The Fall Guy, I can’t even fathom why they would choose to market it that way…