Can relate. I have a phone with stock Android and a removable battery for anything won't or I'd rather not have on my primary GrapheneOS phone. I only ever plug in the battery as needed and when I'm settled at the safety of my desk.
monovergent
- Light and dark modes with nothing in between. Platinum from MacOS and the default look from Windows 95 were crisp and bright without burning out your eyeballs.
- Wasted screen space. People laugh at Japanese websites for looking too busy, but I'd much rather deal with that than scroll for ages or look for links buried 3 levels deep in a hamburger menu.
- The idea that everything needs a backlit color LCD screen.
- Modern standby on laptops. Sure I could just hibernate it, but that's very inelegant when S3 sleep was perfectly fine before.
- Glued-together electronics.
I had a fine time at the DDR museum a few years ago, but I might just be an ignorant foreigner. What makes it a bad choice?
No idea, I've been using UTC both while travelling and at home (which is not located in the UTC time zone) and it is not significantly more difficult than using 24-hour time in a customarily 12-hour country.
That's quite appalling. Might try out LeOS, also curious why it isn't brought up more often. Perhaps because the color scheme screams "I paid for all 16'777'216 colors so I'm gonna use them all!"? Not a dealbreaker for me, but if you have used it, is there an option for less colorful icons?
Awesome, adding to my current arsenal of alternative clients alongside FreeTube and NewPipe. One less chance for YouTube to force me onto their webpage.
Never wanted to rock the boat and never felt the need to growing up. Or at least conditioned to feel that way. Now I often screw myself over by nodding and agreeing as my default response. I like to think that I have ideals, but I hardly defend them, can't bring myself to be reasonably confrontational. Also really bad at coming up with and asking questions and end up nodding along even if I don't really understand.
I am just like that and was surprised how few people mention this when I searched it online. The other day, I stared down a group of people standing and chatting behind my seat while I was trying to eat my lunch. Thought it was just some common etiquette or evolutionary instinct and stared until they walked away.
Can't recall if there was any specific thing in my childhood that causes it, but reading this made me realize that I'm not alone in this survival reflex.
Strongly depends on how it's sourced. Would definitely give it a try if it's excess from a milk bank that's about to expire or if it comes from cultured human breast tissue in a lab. Would not try if it its from some random person or otherwise unclear origin though.
Also wouldn't make a habit of it, there's probably infants who would benefit from me not making it more scarce and expensive than it could be.
Common vulnerabilities: Tracking by carrier, including cell tower triangulation, SMS, and call logs.
Non-smartphone specific vulnerabilities: Lack of security updates. However, the data to be exfiltrated from a non-smartphone is limited. If it's only call logs and text messages, everything's already compromised by virtue of the carrier. So the level of concern will vary with your threat model.
Smartphone-specific vulnerabilities: Tracking by apps, manufacturer, OS vendor, or just about anything that can take advantage of the smartphone's computing power. More data to be exfiltrated if it falls to a security vulnerability.
Smartphone-specific advantages: Can be run Wi-Fi only to avoid tracking by carrier.