There have been multiple accounts created with the sole purpose of posting advertisement posts or replies containing unsolicited advertising.

Accounts which solely post advertisements, or persistently post them may be terminated.

lemmyshitpost

This magazine is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.

paultimate14 , in Purrs like a kitten

Is that the Smilodon?

sirico , in Purrs like a kitten
@sirico@feddit.uk avatar

man, that 2006 era cooler

SirDerpy ,

What’s up with that? Is it passive? If there’s a fan underneath then the shroud is redirecting the hot air back towards the CPU and MB

knolord ,

It’s barely even visible but the fan is on the “flat” side, I think?

SirDerpy ,

Blowing up? That makes sense.

NaoPb ,

Pulling hot air out of the case makes perfect sense to me. The case probably has grating and/or fans at the top.

Even works well with the convector mechanism of hot air rising up.

DivineDev ,

There seems to be a fan at the top. It's a weird layout regardless.

Rin , in Somehow USB disks are still the easiest and most reliable way

Sftp

Pika , in Somehow USB disks are still the easiest and most reliable way
@Pika@sh.itjust.works avatar

I use KDE connect…

But my grandfather does the ol reliable method for image upload, which is:

  1. emails it to himself
  2. prints the email off
  3. scans the printout into his computer again
  4. uploads image to faceboom Facebook

I typo’d Facebook originally but thay was too good to get rid of so I just strikethrough’d it

Lemminary ,

scans the printout into his computer again

Your grandpa got the memo that inhales IT NEEDS MORE JPEG! And took it one step further.

ICastFist ,
@ICastFist@programming.dev avatar

Sounds eerily similar to what my mom does to save receipts, minus the facebook part

RomenNarmo , in Somehow USB disks are still the easiest and most reliable way

Kde Connect

Evil_Shrubbery , in Somehow USB disks are still the easiest and most reliable way

IR data connection.

Print out on paper & scan it into the computer.

Copy the data into the computer in binary with an electron gun directly to SSD.

Recreate the data from scratch.

Install desktop os onto your phone & use it as your main rig to eliminate the need to transfer data in the first place.

Use an USB cable to connect the phone to a floppy drive & copy the data to floppy discs. And enjoy the asmr sounds as you do so.

Bluetooth if all else fails, but using a2dp dial-up frequencies.

Accept that there is no convenient way to transfer data & just live without it.

Natanael ,

There’s gigabit IrDA these days FYI, if you can find the adapters…

Evil_Shrubbery ,

… oh, TIL.

Outside of regular simple-command remotes I only ever used IR data transfer between my PC and Nokia 3650 (bcs the proprietary connector had shitty contacts).

And it was slower than any of other methods previously listed.
(I don’t actually remember, but less than 100kbps I think, about half the theoretical max iirc, some of which was the phone and the memory cards fault too)

DaCrazyJamez ,

Place phone on scanner and scan each screen

Evil_Shrubbery ,

Oh, that’s a good one, high tech, no need for extra data conversion on the PC, works for transferring videos as well :D

01189998819991197253 ,
@01189998819991197253@infosec.pub avatar
Scubus ,

Take your phones hard drive out and add it as an external hard drive

Evil_Shrubbery ,

Nokia N91 actually had a hard drive (like literally a spinning hard disc drive).

So the method is valid, albeit a bit easy.

MonkderVierte ,

SD cards are still a thing.

Maggoty , in Somehow USB disks are still the easiest and most reliable way

Depends on your workflow. I’m usually in google drive anyways. And the file is usually there anyways. So it’s just a few clicks away.

interdimensionalmeme , in Somehow USB disks are still the easiest and most reliable way

I got Plainapp From F-Droid and 100% of the time it works everytime github.com/ismartcoding/plain-app

BehindTheBarrier , in Somehow USB disks are still the easiest and most reliable way

Didn’t want to install something to move stuff of my laptop yesterday. Took a USB which has both a boot partition and a data partition, which worked on my W10 computer and moved it to the W11 laptop and it wouldn’t recognize it…

Long story short, I had to manual set the partition id for the data part using diskpart for the data partition to be recognized. But that was a lot more effort than expected to move a few files over.

WIPocket , in Somehow USB disks are still the easiest and most reliable way
@WIPocket@lemmy.world avatar

Run a ssh server on the phone and rsync stuff over.

pyre , in That oscillated quickly.

Very well done… I’m a huge fan.

rickdg , in Somehow USB disks are still the easiest and most reliable way
@rickdg@lemmy.world avatar

old iphone: hey guise

LordBelphegor , in Somehow USB disks are still the easiest and most reliable way

Pairdrop, send over wifi

SSJMarx , in Somehow USB disks are still the easiest and most reliable way

I know there are other solutions but I almost always email the file to myself /shrug

Crafter72 , (edited ) in Somehow USB disks are still the easiest and most reliable way
@Crafter72@lemmy.world avatar

github.com/localsend/localsend

I used localsend on desktop, laptop and my phones to sync stuffs between OSes and phones. What I likes is that it support multiplatform out of the box and works flawlessly between Windows, Android and Linux distros (tried both on Ubuntu, and LM without problem). It’s just SHAREit without any stupid weird stuffs on it.

Swemg ,

This is the shit

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • [email protected]
  • random
  • lifeLocal
  • goranko
  • All magazines