I’ve been using Twinkle Tray for some time and found it pretty useful.
I’ve been using Twinkle Tray for some time and found it pretty useful.
As @[email protected] said (https://lemmy.ml/comment/3459977), I believe they have different use cases. The TL;DR is: syncthing to have the same copy of a file across different devices, LocalSend to move files between devices directly.
On syncthing you have to upload the file to the synced folder and then download the file to your device, so like device A -> server -> device B
.
Whereas on LocalSend you send the file directly between the devices, like device A -> device B
.
In this case what I meant to say is that I practically don’t have issues anymore. Apologies if it sounded confusing, English is not my first language.
LocalSend has been a godsend (pun intended) to me. I used Snapdrop/Sharedrop before, but it was always a coin toss if the transfer would work or not. I ended up switching to filedrop, but for some reason my transfer speeds were really low.
With LocalSend my issues have been all but resolved. I can send huge files between my pc and phone without fear of it disconnecting, and it works on my pc, old notebook, my dad’s iPhone and my android phone. I really can’t thank Tienisto (the creator) enough for what he built.
In my experience, Active and Hot have been opposite extremes of freshness. Active shows posts that are more than a day old, and Hot shows posts that have no comments and are just a couple of minutes old.
Not to say it’s all bad. Your post was just a couple of scrolls down on my feed.
Sadly, I don’t think so. From what I could gather, it’s just a local app.
I made a comment about this some time ago:
I came across GreenStash sometime ago.
If it’s not what you are looking for, take a look at the “Expense Managers” section here. It lists both FOSS and proprietary apps.
Take a look in this thread: https://feddit.nl/post/1428354
Pocket Casts recently open-sourced both their android and iOS apps:
But the backend is still closed-source.
Take a look at some of the templates available at Overleaf: https://www.overleaf.com/latex/templates
I don’t have a link to it right now, but I use LaTeX to format my CV. It makes it much easier to add new sections and keep everything consistent.