I’m part of Darkrose!
Thank for your suggestion, I will check it in the future since I’m not using/familiar with MPD and I prefer not using stuff in the AUR if possible. My actual solution is Quod Libet, it’s very customizable and can sort music correctly by year. I would like to see Elisa improved since I find it very good.
I think it’s maybe to add a security layer in the case of crashes but I don’t really know. Simple apps were good since they had the same UI and the transation felt good.
Dialer apps are a mess, waiting for Fossify also here
Archlinux has the best wiki and community for every type of issue.
Anarchism@lemmy.ml is moderately active. You also have the solarpunk movement.
*if teeth are in a regular position.
Orgzly Revived deleted every list/note app I tried.
300 is one of the ugliest and most pretentious film of the century: pectorals made in computer graphics, pompous advertising shooter direction (which is in fact Snyder’s “cultural” background) and a completely idiotic use of slow motion like we’ve never seen before.
I can partly agree with you if we talk about the graphic novel but I still regretted purchasing that comic, a pro-fascist and forgettable work.
The better experience is a film without Snyder. The Owls of Ga’Hoole is the only decent work in his (artistically) shitty career.
Your smartphone is already an always connected device, and you can manually do periodical backups on external drives which is a good practice in any case.
You can also set which device rules the file modification (sent or receive only as a folder).
I think it’s ok for most of the people. If you have a tons of precious files to save I can agree with you, but I think this type of “off-grid self-hosting” is just the future of personal data management.
Don’t forget Syncthing, I always suggest it first since it doesn’t require a server or advanced knowledge to work.
You can selfhost Syncthing without having a server, using your daily devices.
We need more noob-friendly systems in this direction. Better sharable guidelines to get started into this approach.
Oh, I’m sure we’re all great parents here. I applaud you for admitting a mistake and having the humility to ask for advice, both excellent parenting skills in my opinion.
I believe the answer is always culture. Once better videogames are discovered it’s likely that they will hardly go back to the bad ones (so that the problem of prohibitionism - which is only a temporary solution - can be solved).
Still have to find an app who can sort albums by year properly (without mess with tags also).