Exactly! Couldn’t get it to work with the formatting :[
My name is Matt. I enjoy helping people with technology related issues. I also like adorable animals.
Je suis seul car il ne veut pas apprendre Excel
Et je meurs car il ne veut pas apprendre Excel
Comme les marins, qui fument des cigarettes sur le canal, ah.
Mais Excel ne sera pas appris aujourd
Exactly! Couldn’t get it to work with the formatting :[
Very interesting, especially how they’re executing unsigned code via the *.sys files to (presumably) get around waiting for MS to re-sign their driver.
Have you tried using:
flatpak repair
https://docs.flatpak.org/en/latest/flatpak-command-reference.html#flatpak-repair
There is a
--dry-run
Option to see if there are any issues before committing the changes.
No worries, got there in the end! Now I can spam my SO with turtle stickers
Oh what the heck, I’m going to have to figure that out hahaha
Figured it out! Setting in Gboard under “Emojis, stickers and gifs” called “Emoji Stickers” Suggest stickers when typing emojis… That needs to be on
Oh interesting, it’s not an app/keyboard, but just a Google widget. Thanks!!
Could you link / screenshot which Emoji Kitchen you have? 😭 There are so many and the few I’ve tried are missing the blobs
Omg, thank you for sharing.
deleted by creator
I want to hug them
Wow, thanks for posting that hahaha.
Red Panda!
Damn this photo goes hard
Hahaha, thanks!
Vroom Vroom
I understand your aversion to trying it and getting charged - but like iMessage, RCS messages aren’t sent by T-Mobile* (which is probably why you can’t find anything on how much it costs).
*Unless you send it over mobile data
Both RCS and iMessage work like Whatsapp or any other “data” driving application where it’s WiFi/Mobile data to send the message. SMS costs you money because it’s sent over cellular only.
However, an easy way to test without getting charged would be to enable airplane mode and then only turn on WiFi. Once you’ve done that, try sending an RCS message over Google messages.
Remember, RCS only works when the recipient also has Google Messages* and you’ll need to have WiFi calling enabled.
Technically, it looks like the default messaging app might work for T-Mobile users.
The process of air pulsing around the city to keep everything in sync is super cool