Upvoted for the title.
Semi-retired Internet geek living with my wife and dog in Nairn, Scotland. When I’m well enough I’m trying to make the world a better place through the application of technology but I’m also the SNP councillor for Nairn & Cawdor which is taking up most of most of my time.
Upvoted for the title.
It’s also why I no longer buy it. It’s a PITA to eat.
I find https://gsmarena.com is the right place to start as you can search, among many other things, for phones with a 3.5mm socket.
Tusky for client. Lots of good medium sized instances (avoid mastodon.social). I’m on mas.to for a general account and mastodon.scot for a local one (both reliable, run by the same person).
I still only buy phones with a 3.5mm socket.
She didn’t “pledge” to, but she didn’t seem adverse to the idea if it was the right person.
Not so effective against the likes of YouTube allegedly.
Similar in the UK. Ours is called Airwave and came in in the early 2000s.
https://www.airwavesolutions.co.uk/the-service/emergency-services-network/
I bet she flew to Bonn…
Not every country has elections either.
Scotland: we have such a massive hangover on New Year’s Day that we need the day after off too.
Rest of the UK: heh, OK, so you can work on Easter Monday instead
They offered it to me. I’ve not been on reddit since the API issue kicked off.
Upvote for “Cautionary Tales”. Just discovered that and loving it.
I believe it’s youth speak for “respect”. Being cool as we old people might say.
This is what puts me off.
Runar Bjørhovde, an analyst at Canalys, said return rates of foldables are 5-10 percent, far higher than traditional smartphones and a deterrent to repeat purchases.
A phone costing me four digits with that high a return rate. Nope.
Largely new friends. Interestingly those who had children later seemed to cope better with the balancing act between parenthood and socialising.
Now in my sixties and still CF. In my thirties the only real down side was the loss (largely) of friends who had chosen to have children so could now no longer come out to play.
But life was good, on the whole.
And still is.
That would have been Slackware, which in those days came on a stack of 3.5" floppy disks. So early 90’s (and hence I was in my mid-30s) but I was still mainly using Windows 3.1 and Trumpet Winsock to connect to the Internet.
I think the first time I really took it seriously was in the mid 90’s with Debian, a copy of which was posted to me, on CD-ROM I think, by Ian Murdock himself (back in the days when he was still with Debra 😏).
BTW there’s now an OSM community !openstreetmap@lemmy.ml
Seems to work fine for me. Shrug.