KDE Connect is great, but it sometimes doesn't work well enough on Apple Devices. I've been using LocalSend with better success when sharing to Android or Windows. But for Android to Linux/Windows and Vice versa, it's pretty much perfect.
Dash0 is a fast-growing, venture-backed startup on a mission to make observability radically easier for every developer.
We fully embrace OpenTelemetry, Prometheus, and open standards, and our "welcome present" to the OpenTelemetry community, OTelBin, a free tool for editing, visualization and validation of OpenTelemetry collector configurations, is being extremely well received by the community.
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Dash0 is a fast-growing, venture-backed startup on a mission to make observability radically easier for every developer.
We fully embrace OpenTelemetry, Prometheus, and open standards, and our “welcome present” to the OpenTelemetry community, OTelBin, a free tool for editing, visualization and validation of OpenTelemetry collector configurations, is being extremely well received by the community.
We’re currently hiring in multiple roles across engineering, design, and product:
Thank you, unfortunately, that's not the point :-) I knew I could do this with a regex.
The advantage of using a sample instead of a regex is, that you don't need to think about it. I have "this.pdf" and I want "that.pdf" is way easier than developing a regex that matches the parts I need replacing it with what I want.
The tool I mentioned afaik used machine learning to determine a valid regex from a given sample automagically somehow (see [1]), which was then applied to the files it found, followed by a preview and a choice to either perform or abort. You could also provide more examples, if it did not succeed determining the regex in the first place to be more specific:
f2 -A 001.pdf -B 001_renamed.pdf -A 002.pdf -B 002_renamed.pdf
It was awesome, unfortunately otherwise not suitable for my needs (windows only or something)
I should have saved it somewhere to re-implement it myself. The only things I remember are, that it was dotnet based, using the dotnet machine learning libs and it was a command line tool. Maybe it was called `ab` because you could provide the parameter -A sample -B destination, but I did not find anything on github.
If I ever find it again, I'll let you know in a github issue.
There's no reason to upgrade a phone more than once in five years at least for me.
I bought a an iPhone 15 Pro Max few months ago and compared it to my S10+ which I bought in 2019 and still have. There's practically no difference for regular day to day stuff, except for the camera advancements which are notable (but not night & day either).
It was only the frustrating battery life, and desire to enter the superior iPhone camera ecosystem that forced me to upgrade.