Pocketbook Lux 5. Great piece of gear, with physical buttons and normal, non-touch screen. Also, comes from a small European company, instead of Amazon.
I manage my collection of ebooks using Calibre - great software.
Pocketbook Lux 5. Great piece of gear, with physical buttons and normal, non-touch screen. Also, comes from a small European company, instead of Amazon.
I manage my collection of ebooks using Calibre - great software.
rsync (laptop -> external HDD, workstation -> dedicated backup HDD)
Syncthing (laptop <-> desktop)
Good news. I really like my FP3+ (with /e/OS), my next phone will be either FP4 or FP5 :)
This. I’m totally for FOSS, but among four commercial apps that I use (SublimeText, SublimeMerge, Reaper and Bitwig), all four use this older model. You buy a period of free upgrades, but you may keep using the current version as long, as you wish. I see this model as beneficial for user and the company (providing them with money), but also encouraging it economically to continue developing the product. In the case of subscription-based model, I see little reason for the company to improve the product.
My personal list is short:
I’m using Firefox:
Next, AMD fab near Poznań. Please. :)
My first Atari 800XL computer and programming in general. I got it when I was 8 and as for a few first days I had no games for it but a book on Atari Basic, I started my programming journey then.
Then audio CDs and DVDs.
Then mobile phones.
Now the research equipment I work with.
Kudos to the Debian team. My favorite distro for the last decade (currently I use testing both on my laptop and workstation).
SublimeText + SublimeMerge (for git). My perfect pair, I’m using for years. I’ve tried Emacs, vim, Neovim, helix and I always return to ST/SM with a sigh of relief.