

Cool! I’ve been using Loop Habit Tracker for a few years, and it doesn’t seem as focused on encouragement but just for tracking things. Which works for me.
I like NixOS
Cool! I’ve been using Loop Habit Tracker for a few years, and it doesn’t seem as focused on encouragement but just for tracking things. Which works for me.
I’ve been using HDR on Linux since February or March and it works pretty well. MPV works great (with vk_hdr_layer), and games work if you run them in Gamescope, which has its own complications but overall it’s pretty good.
Yep, all my classes they said to SSH into the Linux labs to test your code, except for my Assembly class where we had to use an ARM emulator that was only on Windows. I had to swallow a bit of my pride and remote desktop into the Windows labs instead.
Nix as well
I have home and root partitions encrypted with LUKS, and since they use the same password it automatically unlocks both of them. I think it tries using the first successful password to unlock the other partitions.
I love Loop Habit Tracker, I’ve been using it for almost 3 years and it works great.
Maybe 3% voted for a third party, and because they aren’t shown the other bars were expanded to fill the entire space
kid3 can apply metadata based on the filename if that’s useful for you (just things like title and track depending on how you name your files). I also use it for manually editing metadata once in a while, selecting multiple songs and setting the same artist or album tag is pretty easy to do.
I’m not sure how well it works as a mood tracker, but I love this app, I’ve been using it for years.
I don’t really want Phoronix in my RSS, because they post so many articles every day and it would just clog everything up. I just check them once a day or so and read the interesting articles.
I check Phoronix often, and have some blogs in an RSS reader.
Huh, I’ve had it run on battery for years, is there some serious bug with that? I don’t have it run on cellular data or in battery saver mode though.
I use Strawberry with JamesDSP for Linux (on Pipewire) and the equalizer works, not sure how other equalizer software does it though.
They said it won’t be backported to 24.05. It seems like it’s available in unstable now though.
It’s merged into NixOS but it will take a day or two to be compiled and saved in the binary cache. You can track that here.
These aren’t browser games, but could still be fun.
I used to play Battle for Wesnoth a lot as a kid, both with my dad and by myself, and as it’s turn-based it should run fine on a raspberry pi.
OpenTTD could be fun, although it may be a little complicated depending on how old they are. It’s not very difficult in terms of challenge though, it’s more of a sandbox once you get past a certain point. There’s also sandbox options to give yourself lots of money if you didn’t want to worry about money and just build cool trains and stuff.
I used to play a lot of Supreme Commander with my dad as well, so maybe something similar like Beyond All Reason or ZeroK could work if they take an interest to that kind of game. I haven’t tried them though.
It’s height in centimeters
Croc, although it’s command-line only.
Syncthing is also great but may not be what you’re looking for.
There’s lots of FOSS music players, but none of them have a volume slider / preamp. The Android volume slider is always either too loud or quiet so I have to make fine adjustments using the preamp in JetAudio. If someone could add that to an existing music player that’d be cool.
Nice