Don't install their apps either unless it's on an old phone that you've wiped all of your personal data from.
cmnybo
That's what I've been using lately. It prints great at 300 mm/s. It's reasonably strong and doesn't string much as long as it's dry.
I've used Optar. It works a lot better than just printing some QR codes. It fits 188 KiB on a sheet of letter sized paper after error correction. It does require a laser printer and a flat bed scanner though.
He should hook that control panel up to an emulator and make it work again.
At least with TV, you could tape your shows and fast forward through the commercials.
Maybe people will start torrenting youtube rips if they somehow manage to kill ad blockers.
The goal is to get away from US tech companies.
I installed some CAT6a years ago so I could upgrade and I'm still on 1G. I should have looked at the power requirements first. The hardware that was affordable at the time used 10 watts per port to run 10G over copper. I should have run fiber too.
What's the battery life like? High power consumption has been one of the major issues with previous Linux phones.
Nobody needs a $25k display for a conference call. A normal phone will be good enough. Most of the time video is not even needed.
That 3D display would be cool for CAD or 3D modelling if the resolution is high enough though.
The main issue is the lack of software support. They keep making each new Android version more bloated so you can't update more than once or maybe twice. If it wasn't for that, you could keep using the same 5G phone until they shut down the 5G network as long as the battery is replaceable.
I wish Android was more like Debian where it's lightweight, uses stable versions of software and runs well on old hardware.
I just keep all of my music in an NFS share on my NAS and play it with Rhythmbox or VLC. I keep a compressed copy on the SD card in my phone to listen to when I'm not home.