

Ya, it works! But it is very much like a phone interface on the computer. Maybe not perfect but it exists.


Ya, it works! But it is very much like a phone interface on the computer. Maybe not perfect but it exists.


I have been following along here, trying to learn what I can to be an informed buyer for when I try to get into this. Today I learned I have already made an informed purchase 🙂 I want to reprogram my unit just to see if I can change what it does in a loss-of-power event.
Thanks for sharing!


Same. I need to step my game up! Profiles don’t look that hard, just something to learn 🙂


@someamateur@sh.itjust.works @ook@discuss.tchncs.de @infeeeee@lemmy.zip
Thanks for the tips and discussion! Fdroid was incredibly slow to work with, but I have installed osmand with some additions and found that it can possibly replace Gaia. It has a photo layer option and many other things that ate helpful. I will need to spend more time with it, but I feel good about it!
Thanks for pushing me in this direction.


I am using websocket and don’t see a large battery drain. Am I missing something by not setting up unified push?
It’s been a long time since I used Ubuntu, but at the time I did I recall running into issues keeping too many old kernels. They were stored in a fixed space folder (or maybe partition?) that was like 100MB and sometimes wouldn’t clear out automatically, so I remember this. May not be relevant now, but if it is, space in the storage folder is the limiting factor so you would need to change that. If it IS a partition, then you would need to deal with all that is involved with that.
edited to add that my current OS only stores three or four as well. I have never really dived into it.