Exactly that same, really. There were a few things I did that I liked about Ubuntu, like the tray icon extension, but otherwise its nearly identical minus snaps.
Exactly that same, really. There were a few things I did that I liked about Ubuntu, like the tray icon extension, but otherwise its nearly identical minus snaps.
Hah, I was quite proud of that one. Thanks!
Go back to site directories.
Curate your news feed.
Stop using a single corporate search engine.
Participate in online social communities, not in social media.
This is why I switched from Ubuntu to Debian.
If only they’d change the dumb way date time entry works for the calendar it would be near perfect.
Using Evolution for desktop but about to give Thunderbird another shot I think.
Usually on my desktop connected to vscode-server, but when I’m remote, yes.
I use a Samsung Tab 9. Then supplement with a server running VSCode-server and other things. I would prefer Linux, and sometimes use TermuxX11, but it was the best I could come up with.
Don’t even need tabs with screen
Because I like…
You’d think, but the macs held up great, and were easier to replace as they were often rented so needed to be sourced regularly.
Woa… I have become those whom I cherish. Haha
It’s the cold. See comment: https://lemmy.nowsci.com/comment/10188718
It’s the cold. See comment: https://lemmy.nowsci.com/comment/10188718
If they patent it and don’t use it or sell it, I’m OK with it.
This is because of the cold. Apple Laptops dominate because they are (were at the time, anyway), the only screens that would survive those temperatures.
Reference: I designed and led the build of the system used by the Barrow Arctic Science Consortium for managing equipment and rentals for scientists in the arctic back in the 2Ks.
Agreed. I have a Tab 9 next to the bed that would be great to not need. That being said, I also use it for sketching plans and as a full PC for VScode-server, and I’m pretty sure a folding phone won’t have that modularity with an attached keyboard. Bluetooth keyboard with stand may solve that, though.
I like removable batteries, but I like waterproofness combined with thin more.
Easily serviceable batteries are a great compromise IMO.
This is the catch with OPs entire statement about transformation. Their premise is flawed, because the next most likely token is usually the same word the author of a work chose.
Two things to change if you switch from Ubuntu to Debian: