Ok, but have they fixed the UI scaling in high-DPI displays?
Ok, but have they fixed the UI scaling in high-DPI displays?
But think of the illiterate people! /s
The newer version is: https://w3c.github.io/openscreenprotocol/
I used to be on that team at Google and when I left they were working on an open source implementation of it.
Miracast is a separate, older protocol from what Chromecast uses.
🤡
Everything in the video is considered acceptable in open source code today. If it wasn’t, it wouldn’t have been right there in the code for the person making the video to find it.
Oh please. This comment has the same energy as Dave Chappelle doing a whole Netflix special about how he’s been cancelled.
“But the plans were on display…”
“On display? I eventually had to go down to the cellar to find them.”
“That’s the display department.”
“With a flashlight.”
“Ah, well, the lights had probably gone.”
“So had the stairs.”
“But look, you found the notice, didn’t you?”
“Yes,” said Arthur, “yes I did. It was on display in the bottom of a locked filing cabinet stuck in a disused lavatory with a sign on the door saying ‘Beware of the Leopard.
From is run by Vogons!
I have no idea what any of y’all are talking about.
You can get in touch with him eventually, but not for anything urgent. For example, I had to rescue his mom when she lost her car key because she couldn’t get in touch with him to help her.
I know a guy who doesn’t have a phone. Trying to get in touch with him is a PITA.
Chrome and Chromium are 99.9% the same. Source: I used to be a Chrome developer at Google.
It does have to be free. It’s open source software. If they tried to charge money for Chrome, people would just use Chromium or one of the other browsers based on it.
I’ve been using it for the last few months, and while it doesn’t offer as many “nice to have” features as Google (like automatically finding mask results need in where you are), the core functionality works great, and the lack of ads is refreshing.
Chrome doesn’t make any money. How is it supposed to support itself as a separate company?
Not if you want to use both at the same time. Due example, I’ve wanted to have a local Gnome session that I leave signed in, and another session with different settings that I remote into.
To give one example, what if someone wants to have more than one set of options for the same app? That’s something I’ve needed before, and it’s really hard to accomplish if the app always looks in one specific place for its options.
And yet you can still buy phones with headphone jacks. Because there is demand for them. The reason you didn’t see many is because the demand is a lot less than what Lemmy users would have you believe.
I found 8 brands of DVD±R discs—none of them Sony—before I stopped counting. If you think one company stopping production is going to stop people from using physical media, or that demand hasn’t been falling for years, YOU are the one who’s badly out of touch.
Let me spell it out for you: as long as there is demand, someone will find a way to make money filling it. No company, no matter how evil it is, can remove a product category from the market just by leaving the market. Suggesting that a company choosing to stop making a commodity product is an attempt to prevent you from having access to said product is nonsense no matter what company and product you’re talking about, because such a plan could never work.
Or… they’re stopping production because there’s very little demand. Nah, that can’t be it.
Ok, but have they fixed the UI scaling on high-DPI displays?