Seems okay, but doesn’t allow editing of local files / folders, it wants you to use their paid sync service. Also its javascript / electron, not native android.
Seems okay, but doesn’t allow editing of local files / folders, it wants you to use their paid sync service. Also its javascript / electron, not native android.
Obsidian.
Markor is a great open source markdown editor for android, but I wish we had some decent WYSIWYG options, like obsidian, typora, etc.
Mlauncher is stellar, and its open source.
Does a debian version upgrade require an OS reinstall?
I like codeberg, but they also removed a torrent project I was working on because it didn’t comply with german law. Kind of unavoidable when you use any centralized service, especially in a country that’s severely anti-piracy.
This is the main reason why we haven’t moved lemmy’s repo there (yet). Most of the devs are on board with leaving github tho at some point.
I was talking about non-local posts. It’s really hard to tell what you’re asking. Click the all button, and now you’ll see federated posts in addition to local ones.
If they made all top-level comments thus suppressing all other activity on the post, what would that mean?
I can’t figure out what this means. New comments are also sorted as hot by default, if you read the doc I linked.
If you’re looking at the All tab, there is no difference between a local post, or a federated post when it comes to sorting.
Lemmy’s sorts are described here.
Syncthing is entirely self-hosted and end to end encrypted. Data only lives on your machines.
When you run pacman or one of the aur helpers, it’ll tell you.
tasks.org , fully open source, and has a lot of syncing options.
I used todo.txt in this way for years, but unfortunately it’s a dead format/spec, maintainers are all gone.
On arch’s user repository, packages can get marked as out of date, unmaintained, and sometimes removed entirely.
mLauncher, OLauncher.
You might have to use one of those lemmy link plugins for that, bc lemmy’s community rss feeds are meant to be for local communities, not federated ones.
Here’s an rss link of a single community: https://programming.dev/feeds/c/programming.xml?sort=Active
I believe commonmark tries to specify a minimum baseline spec, and doesn’t try to to expand beyond that. It can be frustrating bc we’d like to see tables, superscripts, spoilers, and other things standardized, but I can see why they’d want to keep things minimal.
My main wishlist for markdown, is a better live collaborative markdown editor. Hedgedoc works, but it’s showing it’s age, and they don’t seem to be getting close to releasing v2.
Etherpad also has a markdown extension, but it doesn’t import / export that well.
Hedgedoc / hackmd support a good amount of extensions out of the box. I think typora and obsidias do also (but not open source).
Tempo is pretty good.