Stock android without an unlocked bootloader will not give you access to the hosts file, and there shouldn’t be a firewall you don’t know about. Can you run a vbox or live USB on another machine on your network to see if it will see the server?
I just saw you already answered about the same gateway and mask. Hm. I’m thinking there’s probably a janky setting on your router, that’s the only place I can think of that might have a poorly configured or unconfiugred firewall. Especially if it works on the cellular using the VPN.
Good luck with it, I’m sorry I don’t have the exact answer!
Edit - just saw your edit. Computing is like that sometimes! Glad you got it working. 👍
You could try changing your host server’s IP address and see if it still has the same issue (maybe it’s added to a hosts file, or perhaps you installed no root firewall?) Can you ping 192.168.68.106 from your server? Not sure if ICMP echo traffic would be blocked by Android however.
Do both your server and phone have the same gateway/subnet mask?
Reminds me of when I aliased ‘man’ to ‘rtfm’
No, unless you consider manual csv.
There is a Web app that runs nicely in Firefox.
Unfortunately I have tried FOSS for this too, but have only been able to get all my boxes ticked (pardon the expression) using TickTick - I love it, but it is of course premium and proprietary and
“clipped” - you just reminded me of that episode of House, where the clinic patient (tw: gross) has been using his toenail clippers to trim his nose hair, and he developed a fungus.
PSA - Buy a trimmer specific for that purpose.
Nemo on Windows can read extfs partitions better than NTFS plays with Linux. It’s more of a problem with proprietary file systems, not the open source file manager trying it’s best to reverse engineer the protocol.
When I dual booted, I would just share the extfs partition because it worked the best on both systems, once the extfs driver for Windows was installed.
Ooh, thanks! I love stuff like this.