• @dariusj18
    link
    07 months ago

    Last I checked you have to enable it, which is annoying.

    • capital
      link
      147 months ago

      You use it once, it asks if you want to enable, and you click literally one button.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      87 months ago

      Meanwhile, this was a feature on KDE-land since Klipper, which goes back (as far as I know and if I remember well) to KDE 3 or sooner.

      • @dariusj18
        link
        67 months ago

        There have been third party clipboard managers forever in windows, which is kind of funny because that is almost more like the unix philosophy than expecting the UI system to handle it all.

        • @[email protected]
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          fedilink
          37 months ago

          Klipper was entirely a different program, process, etc. that was using the system tray. Nowadays it seems to be a plasmoid in the system tray. How can that be less of a UNIX philosophy than the Windows alternative? Because it’s developed by the same community that makes the shell? That doesn’t make sense to me.

          • @dariusj18
            link
            37 months ago

            Then it’s not really an apt comparison as the two are comparable. I had assumed based on context we were talking about our of the box functionality from KDE, but if it’s not, then KDE and Windows had equivalent lack of clipboard history without extra tools installed.

    • @MHanak
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      37 months ago

      To be fair it may be a security concern if someone is copy pasting passwords

      • @[email protected]
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        fedilink
        47 months ago

        Keeping their admin password in the history so they don’t have to alt+tab to their Secret Server webpage? W-who would do such a thing?!

      • @dariusj18
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        27 months ago

        I was going to mention that was a potential issue

      • Mbourgon everywhere
        link
        17 months ago

        Yeah, it floors me that it doesn’t look see a high-entropy 8+ character strings and not keep it.