#PDF for IPHONE
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
techniktagebuch · 1 year ago
Text
April 2024
eID und Barmer App
Die Schwiegermutter möchte ihren Gesundheitskurs bei der Krankenkasse einreichen. Wie viele Menschen ihrer Alterklasse schimpft sie über die Digitalisierung, und wir jungen Leute versuchen ihr die Vorteile nahezubringen.
Zunächst installiere ich die Barmer App auf ihrem iPad. Beim Einrichten kann man den digitalen Ausweis oder die digitale Krankenkassenkarte verwenden. Ich erwarte, dass ich auch die Ausweis App auf iPad und iPhone nutzen muss. Aber es passiert einfach nix. Ich stelle noch mal sicher, dass iPad mit iPhone als Kartenleser verbunden ist, aber nichts passiert.
Dann installiere ich die App auf dem iPhone. Als ich dort beim Einrichten wieder an die Stelle des Ausweisscannens komme, wird direkt das Auflegen des Ausweises gefordert. Die Barmer App hat also die Ausweis App Funktion direkt eingebaut, was super ist. Dann öffne ich den Bonusprogrammreiter und lade das PDF der Volkshochschule hoch. Optimaler wäre nur noch, wenn die Barmer App beim Sharedialog für PDFs direkt angeboten werden würde, aber das kann ja noch werden.
(helmer)
3 notes · View notes
samotnya · 29 days ago
Text
I am still upset about the z flip not having an sd card slot but I am too embarrassed to return it since I bought it through work and an external hard drive is probably better for long-term storage anyway :(
0 notes
getfast · 9 months ago
Text
How To Make a PDF On Iphone
Discover quick and easy ways to create PDFs on your iPhone with our informative guides. Learn how to make a PDF on iPhone using Google Docs or the Print Menu. Whether you need to convert a document or a photo, we've got you covered. Find out how to make a PDF of a photo on an iPhone using Books or the Files app. Stay informed and efficient with our helpful tips and tricks.
0 notes
omgbaldguy · 1 year ago
Text
youtube
0 notes
pianosheet · 1 year ago
Text
youtube
0 notes
prototechsolutionsblog · 2 years ago
Text
3D PDF Viewer: Your 3D World in Your Pocket
Tumblr media
ProtoTech Solutions offers a cutting-edge 3D PDF Viewer for both iOS and Android platforms, revolutionizing the way businesses and individuals interact with 3D data. With our state-of-the-art mobile application, you can seamlessly access and explore 3D models, making collaboration and communication more intuitive and efficient than ever before.
Key features of our 3D PDF Viewer for iOS and Android include:
Cross-Platform Compatibility: Whether you're using an iPhone, iPad, or Android device, our viewer is designed to work flawlessly on both major mobile platforms.
Interactive 3D Experience: Experience 3D models in all their glory with interactive zoom, pan, and rotate functionalities. Dive into the details of your 3D designs with ease.
Annotations and Markups: Collaborate effectively by adding annotations, markups, and comments directly to 3D models, facilitating communication and design review.
Offline Access: Access your 3D PDFs even without an internet connection, ensuring that your critical data is always at your fingertips, whether you're in the office or on the go.
Secure and Private: Rest easy knowing that your 3D data is kept secure and private, with robust encryption and authentication mechanisms in place.
Customization: Tailor the viewer to your specific needs with customization options that allow you to adapt the interface and functionality to your workflow.
Integration-Friendly: Seamlessly integrate our 3D PDF Viewer into your existing systems and workflows, making it a powerful addition to your toolkit.
ProtoTech Solutions' commitment to innovation and user-centric design ensures that our 3D PDF Viewer for iOS and Android is a game-changer for industries such as manufacturing, architecture, engineering, and more. Experience the future of 3D data visualization and collaboration with ProtoTech Solutions today.
Unlock the potential of your 3D models on your mobile device—get started with our 3D PDF Viewer and take your 3D data wherever you go.
0 notes
themonkeespaw · 2 years ago
Text
God I hate using my old android phone and how Google is controlling everything but I must admit it can actually download files without having to babysit the browser
0 notes
anderslorentsen · 2 years ago
Text
Vidste du der er en indbygget scanner i appen Filer på din iPhone? Og du kan underskrive det indscannede dokument!
Vidste du der er en indbygget scanner i appen Filer på din iPhone? Og du kan underskrive det indscannede dokument! #DagensiPhonetip
Jep! Man kan scanne et dokument direkte fra sin iPhone og gemme det som en PDF-fil. Det er faktisk muligt med Filer appen på din iPhone, som den er født med. Ingen grund til at hente en 3. parts app som typisk koster! Sådan gør du: Åbn appen Filer og tryk på knappen Gennemse. Herefter trykker du cirklen med de 3 prikker. Tryk Scan dokumenter. Herefter kan du justere kanten på dokumentet og…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
nextmashup · 2 years ago
Text
The 10 Best Free Scanner Apps for iPhone You Should Try
Are you looking for the best free scanner apps for the iPhone? Then you have landed in the right place. In this blog, we have listed the top 10 free PDF scanner apps for the iPhone that require absolutely no subscription. So, read on to this blog to know what they are. Gone are the chaotic days when bundles and bundles of papers used to be the only source of documentation. Now, it’s an era of a…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
ilserviziodigitale · 2 years ago
Text
"Come Scaricare un PDF dal PC in Modo Semplice: La Guida Completa"
Benvenuti nella nostra guida completa su come scaricare un pdf dal tuo pc. “Come Scaricare un PDF dal PC in Modo Semplice: La Guida Completa” potrebbe sembrare complicato. In questa guida dettagliata, ti forniremo tutti i passaggi necessari per scaricare un pdf dal tuo pc senza alcun problema. “Come Scaricare un PDF dal PC in Modo Semplice: La Guida Completa” è un’operazione molto comune e…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
aurorasulphur · 1 year ago
Text
Disclaimer: none of these answers are official, and may not work for your particular use case. If there is a specific feature that an unofficial app had that you don't know how to replicate on the AO3, let me know in the notes and we might can crowdsource a solution.
A lot of people used the Archive Reader app to access stories on Archive of Our Own, and have been upset that the app is now charging to read longer than an hour a day. AO3 (and its parent organization, the OTW) has made it extremely clear in recent days that this app is unofficial and that there *is* no official app. They encourage people to use the website.
However, there are MANY reasons you might want an app, and in a bunch of those cases, there are ways to do those things without having to provide your login information to a random person running an app. Here is a round-up of solutions to the most common reasons I've seen people give for wanting an app instead of the plain AO3 website.
These solutions are based on the following assumptions:
You know what Archive of Our Own is
You often or primarily access it through a mobile device running iOS or Android
You understand what a browser is
You understand what a browser bookmark is
You understand what a site skin is
Edits:
Edited to clarify that you must be logged in to use custom site skins
Edited to add more tips and tricks from the reblogs
Edited to add new entry about notifications/emails
Edited to add new entry about reading statistics and the tracking thereof
I need a widget on my phone's homescreen, not just a browser bookmark.
You can do this with any website, not just AO3! Instructions here: https://www.howtogeek.com/196087/how-to-add-websites-to-the-home-screen-on-any-smartphone-or-tablet/
I need Dark Mode.
AO3 has a default site skin for Dark Mode, it's just called Reversi. Find it here, or at the bottom of any page on the website. https://archiveofourown.org/skins/929/
If you'd like Dark Mode on your whole browser (and you're on Android), sorrelchestnut has advice here: https://www.tumblr.com/sorrelchestnut/737869282153775104/if-you-want-dark-mode-and-dont-want-to-mess
I need to be able to read stories when I don't have internet.
Every work on the AO3 has a download button, so you can click on that and download the story for offline reading in the ereader app of your choice. More info on how to do that is in the AO3 FAQs: https://archiveofourown.org/faq/downloading-fanworks?language_id=en#accesslater
I need to be able to change the text size of the website itself.
If you have an AO3 account (and you should!!) you can do this with a personalized site skin! There is a simple tutorial here: https://www.tumblr.com/ao3skin/667284237718798336/i-have-a-request-if-you-dont-mind-could-you
I need to be able to change the text size in downloaded stories.
My personal recommendation: Don't download in PDF format. All the other formats you can download in can scale the text size up and down, assuming you open the work in the correct app. For me, I download works in EPUB format and read them on the built-in Books app on my iPhone. I hear good things about Moon Reader on Android as well.
I need to be able to replace Y/N in fics with an actual name.
ElectricAlice has a bookmarklet for that here: https://archiveofourown.org/works/34796935
I need to be able to save specific tags and not have to search them up every time.
If you have an AO3 account (which you definitely should) then you can favorite up to 20 tags which will appear on the landing page. The AO3 FAQ explains how that works: https://archiveofourown.org/faq/tags?language_id=en#favtag
I need to be able to save specific filters and be able to apply them to any tag.
Reisling's beautiful bookmarklet has you covered: https://archiveofourown.org/works/33825019
I need to be able to permanently hide certain tags.
The best option is adding this to your site skin. (Must be logged in.) Instructions here: https://www.tumblr.com/ao3css/719667033634160640/how-to-permanently-filter-out-certain-tags-on-ao3
I also hear things about the AO3 Enhancements extension (just for Android/desktop, sorry iOS folks): https://www.tumblr.com/emotionalsupportrats/686787582579851265/browser-extension-everyone-on-ao3-should-know
I need it to save my place on the page and not reload.
This is really mostly a browser error--Firefox on iOS does this to me A LOT. Your best bet is to download the work and read it in an ereader app. A lot of people also will make an ao3 bookmark and write in the notes section which part they were at, but that assumes you aren't falling asleep while reading. (Which is the main reason I have this issue, lol.) For more info on bookmarks, see the FAQ: https://archiveofourown.org/faq/bookmarks?language_id=en#whatisbookmark
I need it to keep track of which stories I've already read/opened/kudos'd.
If you have an account (which you should) then the "My History" page keeps track of every fic you've ever clicked on. No, it isn't searchable or sortable, but it does exist. For fics you've kudos'd, I have yet to find a solution for iOS. For desktop or Android, you can use this excellent userscript: https://greasyfork.org/en/scripts/5835-ao3-kudosed-and-seen-history
@the-sleepy-archivist and @inkandarsenic have a solution for iOS here to use userscripts: https://www.tumblr.com/the-sleepy-archivist/737895174683885568/this-is-a-great-guide-one-thing-i-can-help-with and https://www.tumblr.com/inkandarsenic/737827438571192320/the-user-scripts-will-also-work-on-ios-there-are
I need an app because the website's search is terrible.
(I genuinely don't understand this one but I have seen it multiple times so on the list it goes!!) The search bar at the top of the screen is a keyword search. If you'd rather search within a specific field (like title or tag) then you'll want to click on the word "search" at the top of the screen and select Work Search or Tag Search. To search users, use People Search. To search Bookmarks, use Bookmark Search. (If this is you, please tell me what the heck you mean by "search is bad" and how an app helped with this.)
I need to be able to sort stories by date posted/number of bookmarks/alphabetical/etc.
You can do this using the filters sidebar. Pick a tag you want to filter on (like a fandom, character, or relationship) and then click on the "Filters" button. The sidebar will pop out and you can sort and filter on a boggling array of specifics. A good filtering guide: https://www.tumblr.com/saurons-pr-department/718665516093472768/if-there-is-something-you-dont-want-to-see-in
I need to be able to mark stories to read later.
AO3 has this feature built in! If you have an account (which you should) there is a "Mark for Later" option on every work.
Edit: Thispersonishuman reminded me that History and Mark For Later can be disabled, so if you're not seeing the Mark for Later option, check your settings.
I need to be able to listen to stories using text-to-speech.
Microsoft Edge web browser has a built in text to speech function. Supposedly it works on both iOS and Android, but I have not personally tested that. iOS also has a native accessibility feature in settings for text to speech that will work on the Books app, so I assume Android has a similar functionality. A bunch of people in the reblogs have more in-depth Android recommendations here: https://www.tumblr.com/protect-namine/737957194510794752/seconding-voice-aloud-on-android-for-tts-my, https://www.tumblr.com/smallercommand/737884523093704704/i-use-voice-for-tts-on-android-its-got-some, and https://www.tumblr.com/doitninetimes/737869463749263360/for-text-to-speech-on-android-you-can-also-check
I need to have in-app notifications for updates/I can't ever find story updates in among the rest of my emails/checking my email stresses me out.
Set up a separate email address using a free service like gmail, and use that email address JUST for AO3. Then the only emails in that inbox will be your story updates. I use Apple's Mail application for all my inboxes, but it's very easy to use the Gmail app instead, and you could log in to JUST the ao3 email and set it to notify for every email.
(Also as a general PSA: don't use your work, school, or military email as your AO3 email. Just don't.)
I want statistics like how many hours I spent reading, how many words I read, what my most read tags were, stuff like that.
So we've finally hit something that isn't easy and that requires a hell of a lot of manual work. Short version: AO3 does not track this data because they don't want to. (Mostly due to privacy concerns.) The lack of this tracking is a feature, not a bug. You can crunch these numbers yourself, but it will take a hell of a lot more effort, and it's something I personally found is not worth the effort the couple of times I have tried to crunch those numbers. If you are willing to download your history to an actual computer (not a tablet or chromebook) using Calibre, you can get a rough idea of your most popular tags via their tag browser, but it won't play nice with typos synned to a Common Tag (Canonical Tag/filterable tag) like ao3 does. (If anyone has used an app that gave you stats on this, please let me know in reblogs/replies/via ask how that worked because I am very curious.)
I need an app because <other reason>.
The AO3 Unofficial Browser Tools FAQ might cover your use case: https://archiveofourown.org/faq/unofficial-browser-tools?language_id=en If not, give a shout and we'll see what other tumblr users suggest!
2K notes · View notes
Text
the evil thesis platform : pay 50 bucks to access this 80+ pages document for 24 hours :) or 120 euros to get to download the pdf :)))
the saintly professor I emailed half an hour ago : hello. here is the full pdf and also three other works I think might help you. have a good evening. sent from my iphone
156 notes · View notes
archive-z · 3 months ago
Text
curating reading lists (without social media)
a guide to finding stuff to read, for @divorceblogger. this is a guide specifically for avoiding things like goodreads/storygraph etc which aggregate books that are popular without being all that helpful for finding things on niche/specialist topics.
a bit of housekeeping before getting to the actual list-making tips:
i mostly read nonfiction targeted at both academic and popular audiences. i also read a mixture of classic lit, genre fiction, zines & conceptual/artists’ books, and playtexts & poetry. i read traditional print books, non-traditional print publications, PDF and ePub ebooks on an iPad/iPhone, and listen to audiobooks and audio dramas.
i have a infinite number of books i want to read. the discovery process of new & interesting outstrips my capacity to read them all, so i have to be extremely selective. this also means i never tolerate a book i’m not enjoying. it can have weak points, but i have to be getting something out of the experience, or else i am wasting my one wild n precious life, ya feel?
my goal is to read for quality, not for quantity. i tend to dislike a lot of online reading communities for their focus on metrics (number of books, page count, word count, etc). i bristle at tools that try to push my reading into this direction. i have a reading practice, in the same sense that one would have an artistic practice. thinking of my reading as a practice — rather than a project, a thing to be completed and checked off the checklist — helps orient me towards patterns of thinking that serve me better
i work in the arts industry, so fiction and non-fiction books are reference tools. when I finish reading a book, I put it back on the shelf, like returning a tool to the toolbox until it is time to use it again. i live in a bachelor flat, so obvs i have to resist the incessant pressures of consumerism, but it doesn’t bother me that i have not read every book that i own. they are there for when i get to them. similarly, i would not be bothered by owning a kitchen fire extinguisher that i have not used.
where do I keep my reading lists?
Obsidian: for organising to-read lists on specific topics, genres, eras, locations, etc. i repeat books across multiple lists where appropriate. i don’t keep a single master list of everything I want to read because it would simply be too unwieldy to manage. Small focused lists of no more than ~25 books on the topic are best, imo.
TinyCat: for cataloguing physical books that i own. i have a shortcut to the website on my phone so i can easily pull it up if i can’t remember what books in a series i already have. i can tag anything unread with my “antilibrary” tag. for my own amusement, i also insert library pockets and circulation cards into my books and stamp them with the date completed (using my beloved rotary date stamp). i can also stamp the date a friend who borrowed the book completed it. i like seeing the signatures add up over time.
Zotero: for academic bibliographic citations. useful habit to get into if you transcribe lots of quotes from yr readings into yr notes.
how do i develop my reading lists?
i usually develop my reading lists through a combination of concerted effort to research a topic & ambient browsing. this isn’t Abt How to rigorously conduct research though so im gonna focus more on ~letting books organically find me~
when i have a book that i enjoy, i see if the author has written any more books on topics that interest me. incredibly basic 101 advice but somehow people still miss this one.
check the bibliographies & acknowledgements. if something comes up in bibliography after bibliography, its usually a good sign its worth checking out. also, authors usually thank other authors in their acknowledgements, its a great way to start building an idea
i love when artists talk abt their influences in interviews, like this interview abt what influences and easter eggs there are in disco elysium (i screamed at the Einstürzende Neubauten reveal!!!). i love when fans come up with their own reading lists for media, like my list speculating what daniel molloy would have read and watched in 1973.
when i am travelling somewhere i try to read something related to the to place I am going. Wikipedia is a first easy point of reference to find out if yr destination is famous for being the birthplace of X poet or Y film is set there.
tertiary sources. secondary sources are about a primary source, whereas tertiary sources aim to provide an overview of the major debates in those secondary sources on a specific topic rather than to generate their own new ideas/arguments. the oxford university press “a very short introduction” series varies in quality but its often a very useful starting point.
recs from friends/gifts. my loved ones know i like books, and books are usually a cheap & easy gift for holidays & special occasions. i gift books that i want to read myself, so we can talk abt the book together.
what physical locations do I browse?
Local library, university library. You might be even be able to get a specialist library card to an archive or museum reading room. Some public libraries also have special collections like the Seattle Zine Library.
For-sale section in the local library. proceeds usually go to supporting the library
local secondhand bookshop. there are several in walking distance, i usually hit them up quarterly, especially as i gift a lot of secondhand books
local independent bookshops. several local independent bookstores host an annual bookstore crawl where if you get a stamp from all of them in one weekend u enter a draw to win $1000 gift card :)
thrift store/charity shop/antique markets. there is usually a section with books even if the main focus is clothes/furniture
book events. author talks, staged readings of new plays, poetry readings, book/lit mag launch parties, Writers Festivals, small/independent press fair, rare book fair, zine fests, international library day, conferences
bookshelves at house parties. im 100% the person checking out yr bookshelf at a house party. great place to get yr flirt on.
travel. basically any new place im going, i look-up in advance the local library, second hand bookstores, charity shops, antiques stores etc. and save them in my maps on my phone. if i can conveniently pop into one while im there, neat! i particularly like municipal libraries bc the big ones are usually architecturally interesting (like the Vancouver Public Library) and the small ones are usually really charming and full of specific local history, leaflets to interesting local stuff, etc.
what online locations do I browse?
navigating the online catalogue to yr local & academic libraries is a whole skill unto itself. i was very fortunate be born in the late 90s and to have a specific local librarian teach me boolean operators before i could tie my shoelaces, ride a bike, or, frankly, do most human being things (shoutout to Miss T yr a real one). your library very likely has something like a workshop or at the very least a help desk that can help u with this if needed.
mailing lists of small/independent presses.
publishers websites (academic and general audience).
wikipedia. u can look at the footnotes section on wikipedia. its free. its legal.
looking up university syllabi. some are on profs’ websites, some are available through the university library. there is also the Open Syllabus website which aggregates the most often mentioned books in submitted syllabi, organised by discipline or through a visual map.
what’s available on libby/borrowbox.
Archive dot org and google books/google scholar to read the previews and judge if the book is worth following up on.
i didn’t actually include any selections of my personal reading lists, but if you would like to know more you can always shoot me an ask with a specific topic in mind.
75 notes · View notes
asyastudieskorean · 23 days ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
03.04.2025 — Apologies for the rather orange lighting; I only buy amber bulbs because I detest white light, so when the sun sets my room glows orange, ㅋㅋ.
I’ve also realized the lack of aesthetic pictures of notes and such on here, and well here’s why. I’ve always done notes with practicality, time, and easy reference in mind over aesthetics, even when I was studying for my English BA, so my notes haven’t ever been that pretty, lol. My usual process studying Korean is taking screenshots of my weekly lectures (which is just like a powerpoint), transferring those images to Notability, and then taking notes directly on top of the screenshots on my old reliable 10th gen iPad. Then I save as a pdf, pin it to my desktop, and that’s about it. The way I do my actual writing assignments depends, sometimes I type, sometimes I write on my ipad, and more rarely I write on actual paper and scan it in. Speaking assignments I record on my iPhone, simple as that. Maybe one day I’ll try to do cuter notes, but for now, practicality. 시간이 없으니까 🤷‍♀️
45 notes · View notes
sugaryfresca · 5 months ago
Text
Filler words for users
cupcake decade gaze terror cupid siren click glam
love song prototype mini vamp kiss cams files
religion notes/note/noted/notepad lucky parfait
chaos mbti fragile grave/graves/graveyard latte tape
floral spring poem/poems paw signal dainty corpse
cannibalism paradise angel/angelic cyber trashy
blonde/brunette habits purity fate sundae prelude
taste iphone despair design bikini remix love letter
privacy mocha broken year eclipse eternal purified
decade pdf into wanted morning secret after/before
68 notes · View notes
genericpuff · 7 months ago
Note
Is there like a second hand website or giant pdf you know of with all the chapters of LO cause this daily pass thing is doing entirely way too much
I cannot distribute anything publicly to anonymous users as that would breach copyright laws and that includes episodes of the comic after it's gone behind Daily Pass. You have until August 29th to access LO for free and after that it's gone for anyone who didn't originally FastPass episodes.
Of course, I think it's also my duty to warn you to be extra careful to NOT use the Google Chrome desktop version of the site via an iPad or iPhone.
And if the desktop version relocates you to the app, you absolutely should not under any circumstances try to bypass that by opening the site in Google Chrome's incognito mode OR bypass the reading limit by signing in.
And please for the love of god, don't even THINK about screenshotting the page, selecting the "full page" option, and then going into the save options and exporting the whole thing as a downloadable PDF file.
Those pesky Apple devices are built with those exact features so all the more reason to warn people with Apple devices and Google Chrome browsers to NOT do this!!!
128 notes · View notes