Vivaldi is a good Chrome replacement.
Vivaldi is a good Chrome replacement.
Don’t even need an app. I got an eSIM via a QR code (which went to a website where the eSIM was downloaded). This was on a Pixel 6. I guess the process may be different on other phones.
“an all-in-one subscription that bundled together your choice of Pixel phone, Preferred Care protection, Google One cloud storage, YouTube Premium, Google Play Pass, and (optionally) Fi Wireless service.”
From https://9to5google.com/2023/08/29/google-pixel-pass-ends/
Started at $55. Shame it never launched in the UK (or elsewhere)
A water heater for the kitchen.
A kettle? The only kitchen appliance that’s used multiple times a day… but I’m British so need my tea.
Back in my uni days (1997-01) my uni ran its own Usenet server. Don’t think it carried the alt.binaries, but did have groups specifically for the uni. Sadly only a small handful of people used it.
Obligatory Tom Scott video https://youtu.be/UEfP1OKKz_Q
Fantasia, not specifically the Night on bald mountain section, but the bits with the orchestra.
Also a TV series in the UK called Mealstrom. The paintings would come to life, which was ok but the intro was creepy AF https://youtu.be/_FwP5LAXd7U
Fantasia, not specifically the Night on bald mountain section, but the bits with the orchestra.
Also a TV series in the UK called Mealstrom. The paintings would come to life, which was ok but the intro was creepy AF https://youtu.be/_FwP5LAXd7U
Newsblur is pretty decent, and has (or atleast used to - I’ve not checked) have a free version (likely limited in number of feeds). I pay and is $36 a year.
You can organise feeds from various sites into folders - clicking the folder will give a view that combines the different feeds into one.
Android app is pretty decent too.
Please tell me you’re not meaning the 1980s animated classic - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0084701/?ref_=ext_shr
So? There is no way for the vast majority of users to read or understand the source for something like Firefox - to the point it may as well be closed source. Agreed of course plenty of security researchers will be examining the code which they can’t with Vivaldi - but presumably if that was a security advantage Firefox would have less vulnerabilities when compared to other browsers. (Actually would be interested to see if this is the case!)