Many keyboard layouts use the right alt as the AltGr key for additional characters like language-specific letters or currency symbols (or at least many European ones do).
As for the right ctrl, by association with the AltGr, I usually map it as the Compose key.
Still much better when it fails at the first step. I once got myself in a bit of a struggle with Windows 10 by using "ł" as part of Windows username. Amusingly/irritatingly large number of applications, even some of Microsoft's own ones, could not cope with that.
I got curious if I can get data to answer that, and it seems so.
Based on xlsx from [0], we got the following ??d? localities in Poland:
1 x Bądy, 1 x Brda, 5 x Buda, 120 x Budy, 4 x Dudy, 1 x Dydy, 1 x Gady, 1 x Judy, 1 x Kady, 1 x Kadź, 1 x Łada, 1 x Lady, 4 x Lądy, 2 x Łady, 1 x Lęda, 1 x Lody, 4 x Łódź, 1 x Nida, 1 x Reda, 1 x Redy, 1 x Redz, 74 x Ruda, 8 x Rudy, 12 x Sady, 2 x Zady, 2 x Żydy
Certainly quite a lot to search for a lost package.
Interesting! However, assuming that ASCII characters are always rendered correctly and never as "?", it seems like the only solution for "??d?" would be one of the four Łódźs?
Actually, in English it is pronounced the same as in Czech and Polish: /hɛhɛ/ or /hihi/ (as far as I know). Both are written respectively as "hehe" and "hihi" and are valid expressions for denoting laughter in Polish (and as I assume, it works similarly in Czech).
> (There’s precisely one thing like this I’m aware of terminal emulators adding in recent memory: clickable links, ca. six years ago.)
And they are often disabled by default, as a potential security risk. We don't get to have fun things, do we? (also worth read: CVE-2003-0063, abusing escape seq is unfortunately a valid concern against adding more stuff).
On the other hand, more and more emulators are adding support for various graphic protocols (sixel, iTerm2 format, kitty format).
> I’ve been waiting for one or more terminal emulators to get together and add some ridiculous new escape codes[...]
Well, it's not much, but mintty apparently has some interesting stuff like audio support[0], and codes for font size and font family[1][2].
iTerm2 also has a bunch of custom escape sequences of varying level of usefulness starting from displaying fireworks animation on cursor position to sending system notifications[3] (although sadly I could not get the last one to work for me).
For some semblance of forms, you can check bubbles[4] and gum[5] (binary to easily incorporate the components into shell scripts).
> And they are often disabled by default, as a potential security risk.
Well, that and a clickable link would conflict with mouse reporting if both were active at once.
Given that mouse reporting exists, and "has precedence" due to its age, I think iTerm's choice — to style the anchor-SGR text either way, but to only make them actually act like links rather than text if you hold a modifier key — is the only "correct" behavior for rendering anchor-SGR text, regardless of security concerns.
But that really wouldn't be true for most other potential novel graphical-rendition "styles." Anything that's non-interactive could certainly be on by default.
I just tried it and it works as expected for Windows <--> Android.
I was using syncthing but this will replace it for one offs.
EDIT: I checked out another app in the comments and their website mentioned that it didn't work with a VPN. I can also confirm that LocalSend works when connected to VPN.
I know that Meta and Google make money from data, but they are also competent, so they can be trusted to at least not get breeched or sell the data to the an aggregator.
If the choice was between 'the competent concentration camp' and 'the concentration camp run by one dude in his spare time', then if the question is 'which one is more likely to feed me', then yes, that is apt.
By day she works as a writer for iHarare.com, crafting creative and engaging content that captivates readers across Zimbabwe.
By night, Audrey can be found with her nose in a book, devouring the latest novel or delving into a classic.
and even if there's a kernel of truth here it likely pivots on what is "witchcraft"
It’s not witchcraft it’s our tradition religion and culture,
Indeed, it seems they haven't bothered to change the dates:
>This initiative, slated for an April 2021 launch,
Props to africacheck.org for debunking this and providing links. I did search for "witchcraft" myself in the university's website and (unsurprisingly) found nothing.
Yes, but now you can run into risk of becoming 1000-tabs-open junkie like me :-)
Off-topic, but given how people try to apply LLMs to everything right now, I am surprised there is no extension or something similar to help manage bookmarked and open tabs.
As for the right ctrl, by association with the AltGr, I usually map it as the Compose key.