๐ I'm a dude and have been dieting and exercising lately. I didn't need to hear this :(
IcedRaktajino
and didnโt even answer their question
TBF, that's like half the email replies I get when I ask a basic question.
If a coworker doesn't bother to write the email, I'm not going to bother reading it lol.
Started down the TrekLit rabbit hole a couple weeks ago. Finished "A Stitch in Time" last week and started the "Star Trek: Destiny" trilogy this past weekend.
It is managed, but I can disable smart features and remove it as an app. But it still pops up constantly (basically like an ad). If you try to do anything from the pop-up, it tells you it needs to be enabled to work. So, it knows it's disabled but still shoves itself in my face as if I accidentally clicked into 4 different deep settings pages to disable it lol.
I can and do use FF, but I use Chrome for Workspace because .... stupid company policy reasons. It works in FF, but the way they have SSO configured, you get logged out every 45 minutes.
So it's not just me. Okay. Of the group, I was the only one who experienced that.
Google Workspace (what the company I work for uses for collaboration).
- I don't want Gemini/AI. At all.
- If you disable it, it still pops up constantly.
I have C->Micro adapters though they aren't tethered. I'm just spoiled by only carrying C cables in my bag and being able to just grab any cable without looking or digging (they're all 100W and video-capable except my 10ft one).
I've only tried salvia twice, and it always made me feel like my body was being twisted clockwise. Not for me.
Probably, yeah. I was similarly disappointed when my Kobo came with micro USB, but considering I love everything else about it, I gave it a pass. That, and I typically only have to charge it once a month.
I've got USB-C to micro adapters, but I've only got 4 of them and either keep losing them or they get semi-permanently installed to a Raspberry Pi or something.
Nice. Self-hosting it at home and love it.
I bought the ebook for $8.99, DRM-free even :)
https://www.ebooks.com/en-us/book/136175/a-stitch-in-time/andrew-j-robinson/
The only hard copies I could find were used paperbacks for $150. I would love a hard copy, but not that badly lol.
I also got the audiobook (because Andrew Robinson reads it) but haven't listened to it yet. It's easier for me to follow a story when I read it, so I usually don't do audiobooks unless it's an autobiography (e.g. Stephen Fry) or I've already read the book and just want to hear the story (and can space out without missing crucial plot points).