When an application uses any of these, it will usually have a general "look and feel". GNOME and KDE are Desktop Environments. GNOME primarily uses the GTK+ toolkit, while KDE primarily uses the Qt toolkit. There are applications designed for GNOME or KDE, such as a settings menu or a default music player, usually in the appropriate toolkit.
KDE Connect for iOS lets you: Use your Linux desktop to find a lost iPhone. Send images and files back and forth between Linux and iOS. View the battery status of the iPhone on Linux and vice versa. Send the iPhone’s clipboard to Linux. Use your iPhone as a pointer device or slideshow controller for Linux.
Both the computer and android components are GPLv2 so an iPhone port would require a rewrite from scratch, I think, and be under a different license. If you got your facts first, you'd know that kdeconnect-ios is dual-licensed with MPL as an option. It was written from scratch and not ported. For me, KDE Connect for iOS would be such an amazing
KDE Connect. KDE Connect provides several features to connect your Android or iOS phone with your Linux desktop: Share files and URLs to/from KDE from/to any app, without wires. Touchpad emulation: Use your phone screen as your computer's touchpad. Notifications sync (4.3+): Read your Android notifications from the desktop.
Make sure the two devices actually "see" and can communicate with each other over the network (which I assume to be the same lan as most router's ethernet and wifi cards are bridged) Once you've ensured that's the case check if traffic is allowed over kde connect's ports ( kde userbase ) Also in case you'd still want to go the bluetooth route
Lastly, you can also use KDE Connect to turn your iPhone/iPad into a trackpad for your Linux PC. For this, go to the KDE Connect app on your mobile device and tap on your PC. Next, click on Remote Input and start moving your finger around the screen to move the cursor on your PC. To select something, tap on the screen.
There may be no internet connection, but since the phone and pc are still connected together with lan cable, maybe kde connect will work? And if that does work then if I add wifi—connecting both pc and phone to internet with ethernet tethering—then it should keep working? I don't know, I probably have a flawed idea on how this works.
EdCCh. 4mnjxdzvu2.pages.dev/924mnjxdzvu2.pages.dev/484mnjxdzvu2.pages.dev/3004mnjxdzvu2.pages.dev/3474mnjxdzvu2.pages.dev/284mnjxdzvu2.pages.dev/204mnjxdzvu2.pages.dev/3504mnjxdzvu2.pages.dev/954mnjxdzvu2.pages.dev/38
how does kde connect work