The app mentioned on the post, Organic Maps, has Android Auto. OsmAnd is another app that I know has it as well.
The app mentioned on the post, Organic Maps, has Android Auto. OsmAnd is another app that I know has it as well.
And the “free” means “freedom”, it doesn’t mean “no price”
There hasn’t been a release in some time but work is still being done.
https://github.com/NeoApplications/Neo-Launcher/commits/main/
I’ve got shit to do
Lay a sewer pickle
Honk out a dirt snake
This got me looking to see if there is any way to have a fallback as I have had something similar happen to me.
The general advice is to have a liveboot USB around. I even saw that you can have GRUB simply boot from an .iso file on the internal drives, which eliminates the need to keep a USB stick around.
I haven’t followed the steps yet but I’ll give this a shot because it intrigues me.
https://www.linuxbabe.com/desktop-linux/boot-from-iso-files-using-grub2-boot-loader
In the open source world, I take that as a highlight, not a warning.
This app is everything it needs to be. It looks modern, has nice visuals, I was able to import data from an old tracking app.
It’s such a nice feeling when you find an app that hits all the checkmarks and then you find out it’s FOSS as well.
This is the first I’m hearing of Ladybird. Looks really interesting and glad to see there are more options for browsers coming
I’ve been trying to find some good examples of how to structure the files, and whether to combine the photos from everyone or to keep them separate. Obviously there’s different systems for everyone, but your method of syncing, tagging, and displaying/sharing photos is almost identical to how I’ve been wanting to go about it.
Do you mind sharing how you structure the photo files and naming in your Gallery directory?
I was thinking of implementing the Copyright tag to keep the data of the original phototaker, and then combine all the photos into a Gallery/YYYY/MM
structure, with the filenames being YYYYMMDD-CameraModel
.
There aren’t many events we go to, so albums aren’t a big priority, but on the occasion, I was thinking if using a folder like MM-Event
in the respective year folder.
I’m just putting my thoughts down because I don’t often see this part of people’s photo organizing.
Maps are for documenting the location of things in the real world relative to each other. It could be anything, like roads and buildings, or rivers and bodies of water, or electrical lines.
Then there is all the information that is added to all those objects; adding names to the roads, buildings having an addtess and what type of building they are, the direction a river is flowing and how many rivers flow into or out if a lake.
All of that is just information, where an what things are, it doesn’t actually do anything. That is a map.
Navigation software takes the information about the roads and how they are connected together along with their names and combines it with addresses to show you how to get from one address to another.
You could also have software that simulates the ecological effects of rerouting a river from a lake, or damming a river.
You could take data from a map to show you all the power lines that are near trees that will need to be trimmed and give estimates to your employer on how many people to hire for tree trimming, and then combine that with a map of buildings to show how many customers would be without power if a tree branch triggers a circuit to open.
Navigation is just one part of what a map could be used for, and probably one of the only parts that most people would use a map for.
OpenStreetMap started out just being a map of streets, hence the name, but it has grown to be this massive collection of information. Then there is all of tools that decide what to do with the information. OsmAnd is a good tool for simply displaying the data. It can provide navigation but it’s not the best.
I found the opposite with Gnome which is why I switched over to KDE.
And that’s the beauty, we are free to choose. I’m glad Gnome works well for you.
It could be some type of service building made to look like a house so that it blends in better with the neighbourhood.
Here’s an example of an electrical substation made to look like a house.
Yeah, it’s brutal
Huh. I’ve been running Arch for over 7 years and I don’t think I’ve ever run an additional command before updating. Simply just updating has worked for me.
This looks like a very large Canadian house hippo
Sometimes automated updates are not desirable. I also prefer the simplicity of a bash script over a full container.
Thank you for providing a great example of this