Tippon
Late 90s in Wales, from personal experience :)
It took me way too long to realise the picture wasn't a robotic hand reaching up to press a button...
If you're using Lemmy in a browser, opening a link will take you to the link's instance, like opening a new website. This will mean that you need to log in to post etc.
If you use Lemmy through an app, that should handle the links and make it essentially work like one big website. You can open links from any part of Lemmy and be able to post and comment from your existing account.
The only issue may be the fact that you're on .ml. Some instances have blocked .ml and a few other instances because of what are basically political differences. That will restrict where you can post, and could be part of your issue.
I wonder if the generic tablets with made up Asian sounding names that you see on the big marketplaces could work? They could have slightly larger or smaller screens if they're cheaper than current phone screens, and could have Linux with something like Signal on them for calling.
They'd probably be lower quality to begin with, but could potentially get better if people start to buy them. They seem to have generic hardware, so might be able to offer the drivers and unlockable bootloaders too :)
I dont know about mint, but debian does security updates automatically and just politely asks for a reboot now and then, perfect for an "unattended" device.
Yeah, Mint can do this too. I've set it up on a few of our computers, but it was a while ago so I can't remember exactly how. It was very easy though. The only downside was Firefox insisting on a restart after an update, but apparently that's been fixed now :)
Yep. The 'heated enough' was the main thing they tested for. They had the car in a garage and pointed heaters at it to find out if the can would pop at a realistic temperature for a car on a sunny day :)
Mythbusters covered this, and it was plausible!
I can't remember what they said about the actual woman, but the can placed in Adam's car popped :D
Bad. Copyright needs to be reformed, but this would be more likely to put money into the hands of rich people and corporations.
Imagine that I've just released a book series that's more popular than Harry Potter and LOTR combined, and I get hit by a bus. What's then stopping Disney or Warner Brothers etc from producing a set of movies with all the associated merch, and making a shit load of money, with not a penny going to my family? Not even giving them the opportunity to make enough to live on, never mind getting rich?
In that situation, depending on the contract, the publisher could even pulp the existing books and release identical copies without paying me or my family.
The main image editor most people will recommend is GIMP, but depending on what type of image editing you're doing, Krita might be better. They're both available for Windows, so you can install them now and try them before you switch :)
GIMP is more like Photoshop, and can be made to look more like it with the PhotoGimp extention. Krita is more for digital drawing, but can be used for some photo editing too :)
Kclock
It's going to be some shitty acoustic guitar cover by someone who whispers more than they sing, in an attempt to be soulful 😤