You can try "login-qr" and scan the qr code you get with the telegram app.
Either way, you need to already be logged into telegram in the normal client to login using the bridge.
You can try "login-qr" and scan the qr code you get with the telegram app.
Either way, you need to already be logged into telegram in the normal client to login using the bridge.
It's not that kind of application. Federation would be massive overkill for a project like Mumble.
It's a voip server and client for video gaming, with a couple adjacent features sprinkled in.
It doesn't even really have accounts, and adding servers is just matter of configuring their IPs. What would you even use federation for?
Oh, it's basic af. But it did what it needed to do, and still does, for some.
I havent used it in ages, I have no clue what sort of stuff continued development has enabled. If anything.
My friend group went first from Skype to the massively better TS3, and finally to Mumble. I don't remember really missing anything.
I'll agree to a cease fire, as long you promise to make absolutely no effort to figure out whether I'll honor it.
Right...
There is also Mumble. TS3 era voip and text chat features, but it's FOSS.
That is a distinction without a difference.
They are both images depicting a drivable path, on a flat surface.
How is it misleading?
The title asks "can you fool a self driving car" and the thumbnail illustrates a cartoon situation that immediately explains how they will attempt to do so in the video.
The video then goes on to not only answer the question, but explore the technology involved in-depth.
It MORE than delivers on the "clickbait".
Thumbnails can't be subtle, they typically get viewed at a tiny size compared to the full video and that's why large high-contrast features work better than a random screencap from the video.
Why would children be interested in anything?
Have you never seen educational content before that wraps up potentially boring teachings in an exciting narrative?
I'd take a backup, first, and then just send it. Then, if that doesn't work out, do it the hard and slow way.
Nothing else ever really achieved what the pebble did. I just wanted a cheap second point of interaction with my phone.
After it went under the industry has doubled down on insane cost, pointless features, abysmal battery life.
I don't get it. Pepple made all the right trade offs and the third party support was incredible.
I hope this works out.
Hell yes.
It's fucking open source, this is no different from games with intrusive anti-cheat refusing to run on Linux, except in this case it's not even a different OS.
It's monopolistic and anti-user.
You can, but the reason you use a reverse proxy, isn't revealing your IP or something, it's that without it, the traffic is unencrypted.
As in, log in details and the contents of media streams are sent fully readable by any network node on the way.