• 0 Posts
  • 3 Comments
Joined 10 months ago
cake
Cake day: January 1st, 2024

help-circle
  • Also, apps on modern Android are mostly sandboxed so they wouldn’t be able to “block” your phone on their own unfortunately. You could have one that You make/install that could do “things” but you’d be really limited without root access to your phone.

    As for the phone locking when you plug it, you can make an app that detects when the phone is being charged. What I don’t remember is if you can force-lock your phone from user space Android-provided APIs. Keeping it on while plugged is possible by checking the appropriate checkbox in the developer settings “keep screen on when plugged”.


  • I have a tuxedo machine. Their support is great. The “pre installed os is bad” people have no idea what they are talking about. TuxedoOS is a Kubuntu slightly modified to include their branding (wallpapers, etc) and a couple of drivers, plus their tuxedo-center app (which you can remove if you want).

    Nothing will stop you from installing any other os and if you want to come back to the original OS, you can use their WebFAI and reinstall the way they did it at the factory (or pick another os from the list).

    Their hardware is fine, I have a system76 machine as well and they are comparable in every aspect, considering all of them use “generic” hardware.

    I’d personally go for it if it works for you.

    Good luck!


  • I’m not an English teacher but here’s a way of trying to understand these.

    would can have various forms, but as used here “would you like coffee?” is not asking if you liked in the past, it’s rather if you want now (or in the future) in a slightly more polite form. Would is a conditional. “would you take the blue or the red pill?” It’s giving you a choice.

    Can/could ask more about intent and whether you’re able to do something. “Can you do X?” (Or could you do X? Is the same but a bit more formal). Is asking if the person is capable and wants to do something. “Would you do something?” Gives the person the conditional of either doing something else or just not doing it. It’s a question with an “or else …”.

    Could is also the past form of Can. “I could have done it (in the past) but I did not do it” vs. I can do it (now or in the future).

    Hope it gives you a starting point!

    To give you a final example using various forms:

    “You could have Googled this, but you wouldn’t want to waste time scrolling to the useless AI results, which I perfectly understand; we can’t spend all day reading AI generated text.”