Writer, poet, creative dabbler, geek, cycling and star trek fan. Tends to ramble on about things she likes.
(the username was a suggestion from a url generator for a writing related website, and I immediately made it my nickname all over the internet)
Xfce is just amazing. I’ve used it for many years, starting with Xubuntu I think and it’s my go to Linux version. So minimal and functional.
Seconding AdGuard . It’s really working well for me.
My Brother HL 230 laser printer is so reliable. Had it for years and it never failed me.
I’ve had my SE3 for a year and the battery is already deteriorating fast, hope they’ve figured it out for the 4.
I’m actually surprised there will be a 4. I had the idea that apple wanted to stick with large everything.
I have small hands and large phones give me pain issues. Hope they will keep making SE’s now 😊
That’s great, thank you. I always just put on Lofi girl on YouTube or, if I want to work not connected to the internet, I put on a playlist for some of the albums I downloaded on my iPod nano.
Ps as for obsidian:
it is said to be comparable, but Obsidian was too confusing and limited for me. Logseq is intuitive for me and that’s what I need for my addled brain 😊
It’s cross platform, for desktop and mobile. I run it on my Linux box, my Mac and my iPhone.
To synchronise you have to pay 5 dollars a month, but it’s worth it, as it’s the first time I found something that just fit with how my brain works.
You can run it stand alone for free on either platform to try it out, that’s how I started. if you would like to know more, don’t hesitate to ask
Certainly! It’s this one: https://apps.apple.com/nl/app/antistress-relaxing-games/id1207565651?l=en
Logseq (my everything app)
Ulysses (for all my writing)
Procreate (for drawing)
Raindrop.io (for links)
Bend (stretching app, great for creating my own routines based on health status)
Antistress (app with all sorts of low stress games for when anxiety goes through the roof)
wefwef, vernissage and mona (fediverse)
I use the old reader most of the time.
I usually like dedicated apps, but wefwef changed my mind. It’s by far the best PWA I’ve seen so far.
I work mostly with texts, but if I need something office-y, I go old school: gnumeric for spreadsheets and abiword for documents
Same here. Diptic is wonderful.