I think I still have the original CD set somewhere . I should probably find 👻
I think I still have the original CD set somewhere . I should probably find 👻
I’m not sure where ConnectBot stores its keys, so I can’t help with the ‘transferring to termux’ part :-)
What I can tell you is that you should be able to generate and use SSH keys directly in Termux. Here’s a quick guide on how to do it: https://gist.github.com/evandrocoan/f503188587587d7b1d1ba8746c9c6107
I’ve switched phones recently, and I haven’t set up my keys yet, but as far as I recall I went through a similar process a few years ago to set up SSH keys on my phone (I haven’t tried the steps in that article myself).
Indeed - users that need accessable features should not rely on each piece of software they use to supply them. But even as a one-off feature, it is a good thing to have IMO, as it will certainly expose APIs and hooks in vscode for other accessibility software to utilize.
Also, open source, learning, and all that jazz.
You may not find a use for it, and neither do I in my workflow. But think about accessibility - it might enable some users to perform tasks the find physically difficult using just their voice.
Or, you can go get a beer or a [slice of] pizza, and call out to vscode from across the room to build your app or start a server or something.
You use a keyboard and a peinter? weak! I throw magnets over the memory chips and use a multi-meter. /l334
I’ve been running the same installation since 2012.
obligatory: “arch, btw”
I remember that one 😊
There was another version called Oddballz … It had some weird beasts, but still very cute 🥺