Lots of things! It gives you sqlite superpowers. It makes you more productive and saves you lots if time. You can edit several databases at the same time. And editing them is far easier. For example, it generates and executes the sql code to add new columns for you. You can edit the data of several rows directly on a query response, as if It was a spreadsheet, just by clicking on a column value (or you can use a column value editor). Super handy. You can view and edit blobs. The sql editor has autocompletition and you can execute a statement just by having the cursor on this statement, so you can quickly test multiple independent queries in a single editor window. It shows the execution times, so you can easely compare the speed of several query strategies. You can view the query optimizer info by clicking a button. It supports several scripting lenguajes, and the list goes on and on. Check the features here: https://sqlitestudio.pl/features/
I've used both. Sqlitestudio is far more powerful, intuitive and easy to use.
Fast and efficient. Flies even in old PCs. In Linux you won't find It in the repositories. You have to download and run a handy installer.
I've been using It for several years, in Windows and now in Linux.
Fast, slick and very powerful.
Flies on my humble Atom laptop.
By far the best free sqlite manager.
Thanks Paweł Salawa for this great piece of software!
Nope... I'm using a tiny SBC, a Radxa Zero with a A53 Cpu, with Manjaro Linux, as a ultra low power daily driver and it is perfectly usable for light browsing, programming or productivity.
It boots Linux in 7 seconds and xfce desktop is pretty snappy.
Kernel is 6.1 and RAM is only 4GB.
Opens Lazarus almost instantly and FPC compiles ARM binaries super fast.
It's almost like there's more than one problem to be solved in American society. People being in that state is an indictment of the US mental health system [0] and the terrible inequality forcing them on the streets [1], not an endorsement of cars, a selfish band-aid that exacerbates the bigger issues.
Did a decade on public transportation, I'm too old for that shit now. There's nothing wrong with not wanting to be in an open air human zoo several times per day.
There isn't. But the fix isn't to isolate yourself from society in a metal box, it's basic empathy and making sure those folks get the help they need and aren't forced into those situations in the first place.
'... when communicating with residents, preach abundance rather than restriction. “The first lesson I learned is never talk about the means, which is less cars,” Smet says. “I don’t say ‘I’m going to make this space car-free’; I say ‘I want to make this place one where parents can sit, watch the children play sports, have a drink, enjoying the clean air.’ Who can be against kids playing on a car-free square?...'