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What are some essential apps and tools for communicating, gathering information, doing work, etc, completely off the grid?
  • Manyverse might be good for that. It's P2P social networking that syncs whenever you've got internet.

    The entire suite of simple mobile apps is also really good, the Notes app in particular seems useful.

    Organic Maps or OsmAnd will let you download maps offline and navigate with just GPS.

    Aard 2 will let you browse an entire dump of Wikipedia and Wiktionary.

  • Why would/wouldn’t you switch to a modern IDE like Visual Studio/VS Code if given the decision right now?
  • I'll never use any Microsoft products again because of the inevitable enshittification. It might be nice now, but that's just because they're in the Embrace step of EEE. I could waste a bunch of time churning through that process, or I could learn tools that have proven that they're in it for the long haul.

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  • This would tie in nicely to existing library systems. As a plus, if your account ever gets stolen or if you're old and don't understand this whole technology thing, you can talk to a real person. Like the concept of web of trust.

  • Programming Problem
  • One big reason Nim never really caught on is because we've got lots of fast-ish languages with garbage collection (like Go, which sucks a lot of oxygen away from Nim IMO). Rust introduced a new concept to the mainstream that lets you program safely without a runtime hit for garbage collection.

  • Infinity for Reddit's latest update...
  • It's 100% clear that Reddit is trying to kill off third party apps completely so that they can facefuck you with ads and other garbage. The Apollo dev saw the writing on the wall. I can't blame other app devs for trying to squeeze a bit more livelihood out of this, but hopefully they've realized that they need to move on asap. In the end, it's a great reminder to not build your business on someone else's platform, even if they're "cool".

  • Competitive games for gamers with slow reflexes
  • You might like Total Annihilation and its modern descendants, like BAR or Zero K. There's still some micro depending on the variant, but the focus is much more heavily on macro, along with making the units smarter.

    Apart from that, the Civ games are turn-based, but scratch a similar itch as RTS games

  • good ubuntu based distro?
  • The founders don't like each other on a personal level, and I haven't heard about any updates since then, so until there's new life breathed onto the project somehow, I'm assuming that it's on the back burner at best.

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