Hugo
Hugo
I'm not talking about syncthing/syncthing-android, but rather syncthing/syncthing. Right, I might have phrased a bit poorly: the QR code itself _is_ scannable, I meant that syncthing has no button to...
I'm sorry, looks like there's some confusion as to what I'm trying to do: - I've a notebook and a mobile phone. - I'm _not_ runnning syncthing-android (I've already explicitly...
@NickPyz: Yup, exactly. I never mentioned the android app. @uok: > also why don't you use the excellent android app? Because I'm not using android. 😄 > You only need...
> You can scan the qr with any qr scanning app That's a nice excuse for any app to not-implement QR (or mostly any feature _at all_). But since the...
@uok: By default syncthing only listens to localhost (for obvious reasons), so this won't work. This issue isn't really about finding quick workarounds (hey, we can work around _any_ usage...
jsqrcode didn't work on my phone (nor native browser, nor firefox), nor on firefox on my laptop. So it basically means it'll be useless on my phone, and also, that...
> IMHO it is much easier to use a native app to scan the QR code into Syncthing @uok: That would be weird. Syncthing is a native app, that runs...
According to [this test page](https://mozilla.github.io/webrtc-landing/), `getUserMedia` is not supported on my phone either. --- **edit**: This [feature request](https://together.jolla.com/question/9514/11928-support-webrtc-in-native-web-browser/) confirms that.
@generalmanager Firefox for Android on Jolla only runs if you have an Android VM installed, which is not always the case (and it's quite memory/cpu hungry for a phone, of...
v2: ran `go fmt`