I like Axios because it’s short form but has extended versions of I find it interesting enough to learn more.
I like Axios because it’s short form but has extended versions of I find it interesting enough to learn more.
This is true. You only have to deal once with a device that doesn’t have a light or something to realize just how essential indicators are. I have sworn to the electronics gods to never to make a device without at least a power led.
I use mergerfs to pool a bunch of varying sized drives and then run snapraid on the whole pool to protect it. Then, I’ve got Kopia backups running and backup up to a remote repository. This solution has been flexible and I’ve already been able to recover from 2 drive failures very quickly and easily.
The Yogscast Jingle Jam! They do an annual month long Livestream where they play games and raise money for a variety of charities. Donations of 35 pounds or more also get a whole bevy of game keys as part of the collection that can be redeemed on steam. You can see the list of games or donate at jinglejam.tiltify.com
Less biased than some other media sources I’ve seen and makes it more likely that I’ll read it. Since the opinions are clearly marked it’s possible to skip them as well and just read the facts as presented. I just keep it in mind as I read and it works for me.
I recently found out about Axios which does short bullet point coverage of just the interesting/most important parts of stories. It seems to be a bit biased liberal overall, but being able to get the highlights without wasting time reading all the fluff is pretty convenient.
I just use a cheapo Bluetooth ELM327 clone from Amazon. I got the second cheapest one that reviews said worked and after a bit of fiddling to get it paired, it seems to work alright for the occasional issue.
It’s the best one that I’ve found since the old ES File Explorer sold out and became adware
AndrOBD for connecting to my car OBD2 Bluetooth adapter. It lets you read any diagnostic codes and let’s you reset warning lights.
Aegis for managing 2FA tokens. Weawow for weather. MiXplorer for file management.
Purdue University still has a campus-only file sharing network called DTella that’s DC++. It been getting smaller, but there were a few members that shared 50+ TB at one point.
I don’t think so. It might have been delisted as I don’t see it either. Regardless, it’s OSS so you can get it from the GitHub repo. https://github.com/hidroh/materialistic
Screen is probably broken. You might be able to replace it by buying a replacement screen and following a guide by ifixit. Usually pretty straightforward.