

Yeah I’m aware that times have changed, which doesn’t mean I don’t remember how it was to have a phone which comfortably fits in a pocket with other stuff. Like HTC Desire or Galaxy S2.
Yeah I’m aware that times have changed, which doesn’t mean I don’t remember how it was to have a phone which comfortably fits in a pocket with other stuff. Like HTC Desire or Galaxy S2.
Thicc!
Look like it has everything that matters, sd card, 3.5mm jack, a good battery, and a recent OS version.
6.2" as a compact phone, huh. My 5.8" feels like a pocket TV
XFCE, using it for over 10 years, not planning to change it unless the DE changes radically.
Xubuntu LTS. I’ve been meaning to switch to Debian Stable when something breaks, but it’s my third LTS on the desktop and 5th on the laptop and there was just no opportunity. I also learned to avoid PPAs and other 3rd party repos, and just use appimages when possible.
You can have a kernel from Testing or even Sid, I believe, but yeah, it’s what we want to avoid - tweaking.
LTS is released every 2 years, for reference.
A mandatory part at the beginning of every Ansible playbook!
KeePassXC is free though
Replacing gmail with a $1/mo account is where they draw the line for paid subscriptions
It just works, there’s no “how”. Take one of the devices outside, connect to the internet, done.
Unless you live a very dynamic lifestyle that requires your calendar to be 24/7 synced, you can just use whatever server software you like, make it listen in LAN only, and have your devices sync when they’re at home.
DecSyncCC and Syncthing is another option.
Yeah, it’s still much better than the long one I have now. Have you seen Unihertz brand btw? They have some small but thick ones too.