The app stores already know.
I had good luck with free wifi at coffee shops. The fastest wifi I had in Japan was at a Starbucks. I haven’t had great luck with the free wifi on trains at all.
I have heard Ubigo is a good option for esim cards. Make sure to enroll when you have reliable internet access already.
If you’re looking for a vendor for your portable wifi, IVideo gave us a router with excellent speeds on my last visit, and the return process was a simple prepaid envelope. Make sure to double-check the opening hours of the shop if you pick up your router locally.
It’s probably the AudioData API.
Networking two machines is easy; networking several with good onboarding and DNS is not as easy.
Tailscale is a nice way to set up a private network between your machines. It’s perfectly fine.
IMO this is to be expected for any travel lock – something this small and light is vulnerable to a rock just as much as the TSA key set.
I’m not denying that Mozilla has a history of poor governance. But they are the competitor to Google here. You need to consider these things in context to understand what anti-corporate means for the internet.
It absolutely matters. We need to consider that a right-wing actor is likely to exaggerate claims against an organization that is ostensibly socially-minded and represents anti-corporate interests, like Mozilla.
Seconding that soap bar bag, it is magical.
what a niche community to stumble across!
Glad you're here – I'm trying to build a second home for travelers outside of Reddit. Thanks for your contribution!
I do enough of this in the day job. I don’t have time to mess around with free hosting to save $20 a month.
As a workaround, I was able to sign in as a second admin user, go to a post/comment I made in the community, and assign myself moderator through the ... menu.