Paper is always preferred but as others have said, ebooks don't take up any space so I end up owning a lot more of them.
Kirk
Oh man I love this haha thanks for sharing. You should get a pixelfed account!
I also noticed that when Lemmy links do appear it's often to a random federated instance, not the original source.
eSIMs definitely make it harder...
Still, I get closer and closer every day to taking the plunge. My smartphone is pretty stripped down without any social media or games, etc. But it is still more distracting than I would prefer.
Thanks for sharing this, I really like seeing the methods of how some people are coping with today's distraction hellscape.
Been really interested in this and/or the Light Phone! I'm curious if your plan is to use it as a full-time daily driver? Or an occasional "I want to disconnect right now" thing?
I really wish carriers made it easy to swap where your phone number is pointed because I would love one of these for weekend/evening use. But I'm pretty intimidated to switch full time.
Would also love to see a follow up in a few months to see if you found it sustainable.
TNG is the gateway drug
There is some back story needed with that one... but maybe it's tangential enough to make the viewer want to know more?
Devil’s Due
If this was the only episode of Star Trek I'd ever seen I'd have no interest in continuing 😅
I actually think "Inner Light" is a good option for OP because is a "side quest" that doesn't require much backstory, while still being thematically aligned with what to expect with TNG.
Eh, I would have agreed a few years ago. But now default Ubuntu boots up basically looking like MacOS with the browser (firefox by default, not Chrome) right there in your face ready to launch. For someone truly not aware how to use a computer beyond a browser it couldn't be much easier (except booting directly into the browser). The only thing preventing that from catching on is that those people don't even know what an operating system is, let alone that it could be changed.
The idea of ChromeOS is simple: it's just enough Linux to get you online. It turns a PC into something akin to a tablet, with a full-screen icon-based app launcher. The desktop is very simple and vaguely Windows-like: there's a taskbar at the bottom, a file manager, drivers enough common hardware that most things just work out of the box, including a bunch of common GPUs, networking including Wi-Fi. In terms of apps, there's a built-in Google Drive client, and of course the Chrome web browser.
This is more or less describing one of the many immutable distros that only run programs with flatpaks. It's entirely feasible if someone wanted to make a distro with even less functionality, but why?
That's great! I have been using ClearURLs with varied success. Nice to see it built in .