+1 to copyq. It has a lot of funcionality, you can exclude apps to save clip on log (passwords managers), yo can do personal snippets, images, even create your own scripts.... It has a bit deeper than anything else I tried and yet simply enough to run as is....
It's not like the clipboard is secure either. Any arbitrary app can listen to the clipboard in X11, and while it seems harder in Wayland, I'm not sure if I've ever seen a clipboard permission dialog (my Wayland experience is limited though).
Turning off the browser intergation means that the user may accidentally auto-type into the wrong website. Turning off auto-type means that external applications can see the password.
With Wayland, the compositor gets to decide which clients to send the "clipboard data available to paste from this file descriptor" event to (wl_data_offer). For example the compositor might only send it to the client whose window is currently focused. So clients that don't receive this event would not have the fd to be able to read from it. Clients that do receive the event can read that data without any restrictions.
That said, this ends up also making this like clipboard managers or wl-paste not work, so there is a wlroots protocol (wlr_data_control) that lets the client know about all data offers. How is a malicious process prevented from being a client of this interface (or even should a process be prevented...) depends on the compositor.
The approach I use is to have a single incoming notes file for my phone. I then refile those notes into the correct location on my laptop later. It works for me because I realised that when I want to take a note on my phone I usually don't have time for a complete note, so the extra refile step gives me the opportunity to fill it out more at my leisure on my laptop. As an extra benefit though, it means that I only have one file that can conflict, and I can just bias resolution towards the phone's version.
There aren't many small phones that aren't cheap and nasty. iPhone minis are small and premium which is rare. The android manufacturers really need to try harder. 6" is basically a tablet. It's really unnecessary for phones to be as big as they are today. UI designs have gotten more sparse and wasteful of screen real estate.
I feel that. I used to run Xperia Compacts, but I think Sony stopped making them. Currently have a Unihertz Jelly 2, and while I really like it, occasionally I'd come across an app that did not expect such a small screen.
Being affordable is an advantage, unless you want to put on the ritz with a premium locked iPhone. For example Sony Xperia XZ2 Compact is a nice affordable smartphone.
Well, Google only seems to find that site and a couple of clones for the phrase "He's got called company". IMDB doesn't list it either: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt2575988/taglines/ (granted it's not the definitive source, and could just be missing it)