

Try KDEConnect (or GSConnect for gnome). Clients for Linux, BSD, Android, Sailfish, iOS, macOS and Windows.
Another option (maybe better, depending on your distro) is Warpinator. Linux, Windows, and Android.


Try KDEConnect (or GSConnect for gnome). Clients for Linux, BSD, Android, Sailfish, iOS, macOS and Windows.
Another option (maybe better, depending on your distro) is Warpinator. Linux, Windows, and Android.
Instead of separate dedicated shape tools, in gimp you use the appropriate shape of Selection tool to create the shape(s), then you either add the fill and/or border of the style you want, or use ‘Stroke selection’ to choose from various draw/paint tools/styles. So for a circle you use the Ellipse Selection tool.
You can use any of the transformation tools, including Rotate, on the selection vs the image contents --you choose the tool option for which thing you want it to apply to. You can drag or enter a specific number.
(this is just information for anyone who wants to know how to do the things you mentioned. I’m not interested in talking about how good or shitty the programs are or comparing them)
As I understand it, you can’t just real a url from the code and enter it into your browser. You have to have their app installed on your phone to read it with, which then somehow sends to google to unlock the page. So obviously the code contains the IP address/fingerprint of your desktop and/or a code linked to that instance of the captcha page. The purpose is so they can link your desktop browser to your phone = to your identity, for the giant database. Linking all the devices you use to your ID has long been a goal.
I think it’s ironic that the alternatives to Android (graphene, calyx) only fully work on Google phones.
Oh I see, thanks. I didn’t understand what OP meant by Wi-fi Direct, I was thinking it just meant going over the LAN via the router. So I guess this means a device making itself into a wi-fi hotspot with is own local IP address that can be connected to directly, right?