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Too little too late, already ditched the whole ecosystem after so many years and devices.

Same here.

Switched to a Boox, installed koreader, set up sync thing. It's insane how much better a reading experience this is


The only previous option was not paying for books. This change at least creates the potential for a path to pay for books, if publishers accept it.

No, these publishers were already available DRM-free from other stores.

Same. I'm done.

Yep, never again. I tried to take a pragmatic position with the DRM, and it is just not possible. I buy the crap out of DRM free stuff, but if it's not DRM free, it's not for me

Well, they have this list in their repo: https://github.com/0xCUB3/wBlock/blob/main/Adblock_Compariso...

Only one I can see is (slightly) less RAM use.


Sanding and polishing, likely.


Nah, it just came out like that (i printed it :D)

We experimented with ironing, but you can't see it in those views. The A1 is a pretty good printer OOTB. There were a few iterations on the case design though to optimise the edges.


@admin, we need the 10 at the end of the title.


Added then deleted, but git remembers.


Have you check https://pitch.com/ ?


nope, however my use case requires high level of customization so I had to build it from scratch...


Slightly off-topic, but as this will require kids to have access to an unlocked phone...

I remember Windows Phone had the feature of "unlocked apps", which you could run without having to unlock the phone: think calculator, browser, games. It was called Kids Corner[1].

Have any other OS (iOS/Androind) copied anything similar to that? This app will (or at least in my case) live in a place like that, where they do not have access to the whole platform.

[1] https://www.windowscentral.com/kids-corner-windows-phone-8


For Android w/Playstore you can set up a child's account through Google and then use Google Family Link app to control app downloads, block specific apps, and set content restrictions for apps, movies, and games.

You can set down times for the whole phone and lock it remotely which is of huge benefit for bedtimes!


That's parental control, that's not the same. I want to hand my phone to my kids and let them access only one or two apps that I have listed as allowed.

I don't want (yet, but it will come) for them to have their own device that I control as you explained.


Depends on your device then. Some Android Devices allow multiple-user accounts, one of which can be a specially locked-down child account. I think Samsung Galaxy have a proprietary flavour as well.

https://support.google.com/kidsspace/answer/10065701?hl=en


Android should have a Kiosk mode that's available sometimes that locks it to one app full screen.

Android may have alternate launchers you can install (they are just apps) which you can customize how you need. One of the best features of Android imho.

I tried helping a friend with their kids Amazon tablet and left the experience wanting to wipe it clean and just define what 4 buttons parents can put on the screen.

Other tech:

Apple has a guided access feature which locks it to one app (except it's handed to them).

We're holding off on personal screens for now until the information diet can be tamed and managed. Looking for a smartwatch with a phone with physical buttons and no screen. Seem to be some options.



It only let's you pin single app though, as far as I understand.


my android (/e/OS) allows to create multiple accounts that you can switch. i create a second account that only has the apps my kids are allowed to use. they can't switch users as that would require them to log in.

i don't think multiple account is an /e/OS feature, but must be coming from lineage/ASOP so other ROMs should have it too (unless it was intentionally removed)


I still have some nostalgia for Windows Phone. I genuinely liked the platform - even bought an Omnia 7 back in the day, and later a Lumia 1020 (that camera was so good).

I still think the tile based UI was underrated. Live Tiles felt like a smart idea that never quite got the support it needed. It's one of those "what could have been" stories in tech.


Yeah, that's a valid concern. We use an older spare iPhone for this, which worked out well. iOS doesn't have a "Kids Corner" equivalent unfortunately - you'd need to use Screen Time restrictions to lock down the device (block apps/calls/etc) but still need to unlock the phone


There was an article not long ago about using Apple Configurator to dumb down an iphone : https://stopa.io/post/297

Maybe this could be handy.


You can do that using 'Settings -> Accessibility -> Guided Access' in iOS.


Maybe can do basically the same thing with a dumb SMS/MMS-based interface actually, text-adventure style. Then could do it with a dumb phone.


iOS lets you do something very similar with Guided Access: https://support.apple.com/en-us/111795


iOS lets you lock apps behind faceID.

All my communication and banking apps are protected.


Yes, and I do the same. However, Kids Corner was a curated list of apps that you chose to share freely without password/FaceID.

I don't want to lock my browser, photos, maps, etc. behind FaceID. I want to hand my phone knowing they will only use one or two apps and the fun stops when they hand me over the device.


Just two days ago the BBC published[1] a story about how a ransomware group tried to infiltrate their network by.... approaching their cybersecurity correspondent.

I wonder if it was the same group.

[1] https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c3w5n903447o


50/50 title here: it can be the app devs or it can be the reporter.


All but the last example look better (to me) on Krea than ChatGPT-4.1.

The problem with AI images, in my opinion, is not the generated image (that can be better or worse) but the prompt and instructions given to the AI and their "defaults".

So many blog posts and social media updates have that horrible (again, to me) feel and look of overly plastic vibe, like a cartoon that has been burn... just like "needs more JPEG" but "needs more AI-vibe".


I'd argue the last one looks better as well, at least if you're considering what looks more 'real'. The ChatGPT one looks like it could have been a shot from a film, the Krea one looks like a photo someone took off their phone of a person heading into a car park on their way back from a party dressed as a super hero (which I think far better fits the vibe of the original image).


My problem with the last one is that the person is not walking directly into the door hence giving an unrealistic vibe that the ChatGPT one does not have.


Sure, it looks like he's walking toward the control panel on the right of the door.

Personally - I think it looks considerably better than the GPT image.


Yeah I see that a lot. Blog usage of AI pics seem to fall into two camps:

1. The image just seems to be completely unrelated to the actual content of the article

2. The image looks like it came out of SD 1.5 with smeared text, blur, etc.


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