I wear my PineTime everyday. Best watch I’ve ever purchased. It doesn’t have too many bells and whistles but it tells me the time.
I wear my PineTime everyday. Best watch I’ve ever purchased. It doesn’t have too many bells and whistles but it tells me the time.
I haven’t even thought about getting McDonald’s ice cream in years just because it seems like they are never able to serve it so I’m not even going to try. When I want ice cream I’ll go to the place that make ice cream on a cold slab.
Yeah, I was playing the Guardians of the Galaxy game on Linux Mint the other day. It blows my mind what Proton can do.
I didn’t have Netflix before the crackdown and I don’t have it ever. Basically a net positive of 0.
USB C is an open standard and can be used by anyone.
Keep in mind that magnetic cables do not conform to USB C standards and specifications and are therefore never recommended for the sake of compatibility and safety. They may work for certain use cases but I wouldn’t use them personally.
Open source physical keyboards do exist though
This was a one off that hasn’t been updated in almost a year. I doubt it’s getting any more updates.
I agree Florisboard is unusable as a daily driver
I ditched Windows for a Linux Mint just over a month ago. Best decision.
Too many people don’t know what it actually means.
I think its 90% of users lurk, 9% comment, and only 1% create new posts. Or at least something like that
A good argument for open source
I’m running my own server on a linode. I’ve got it on the cheapest tier which is $5 a month. I’m not quite sure what I’m going to do when the 25GB gets full, I’ll have to find out the best way to delete old posts and pictures.
What they mean is the only way to play these games is emulation instead of being able to purchase them from the company that owns the rights. That’s bad because many people either do no know about emulation, do not know how to emulate, don’t want to figure out how to emulate, don’t want to involve themselves in legal gray areas (downloading ROMs is illegal afterall) etc… Basically, the companies that have the rights to these games are just squatting on them and not ever rereleasing them again. Those people above can never or will never experience those games. Some people want to just pay the company and play an old game that they heard about so they can’t. As far as preservation goes, the archivists have that covered but there just isn’t a solution for the average Joe to play older games that are no longer sold physically or digitally.
I’ve seen the Hangover 1 a ton of times. I’ve never seen The Hangover 3.
I just get never get any of my friends to use Google +. It was just me and a few of my tech nerd friends.
I had forgotten all about Wave. My friend and I were super hyped when it came out but we ended up rarely using it.
I might have to get one of those if my watch ever stops working