@[email protected] @[email protected] Cool thing: now you can configure zoom and set your own skybox for the cube effect.
Just a stern but friendly hare.
I work as a technical writer 🖊️
I’m from Brazil 🇧🇷 and I speak US English 🇺🇸, German 🇩🇪 and some Dutch 🇳🇱
I play games 🎮 on Linux 🐧
I like social psychology Ψ especially fandom studies 🐰
I read locked-room mysteries 🔪🩸
I try to code a bit with C++ and Qt 🖥️
I’m obnoxious about Podman Containers 📦
I have a PeerTube channel 📺 about hard games ⚡
I value Open Source, Open Access and strict Copyleft 📖
I’m very socially liberal and value sex positivity 🏩
I draw some but I suck at it 🎨
Cis, he/him ♂️, gay 🏳️🌈, kinky 🔞, pm-friendly 💬, monogamic 💒, demi :demisexual_flag:, single.
I help with solutions and care rather than sending good vibes. Nice to meet you.
@[email protected] @[email protected] Cool thing: now you can configure zoom and set your own skybox for the cube effect.
@Wander @selfhosted This sort of setup is very attractive IMO because of the low power usage. Android phones use much less power than old PCs.
The main con I see is not having ethernet (maybe there’s some sort of MicroUSB/USB-C to ethernet adapter, but I didn’t look into it yet). That, and there being only one port.
@[email protected] @[email protected] Oh yeah, another cool thing worth noting: the original cube in QtWidgets had about 4500 lines of code, this new one in QML has about 1000.