US only :( How does that still exist? :(
eursec
Skagen Jorn gen 6 hybrid
Pros:
- Looks like stylish regular watch with real hands
- Always-on e-ink screen
- Good Gadgetbridge support
- Battery life about 5 weeks
Cons:
- Expensive
- Slow due to e-ink screen
- Limited features compared to full smart watches
I'm just a noob developer myself, but I believe Android Studio is what most devs use. At least it's what I use and what works for me.
I am very happy with my Skagen Jorn gen 6 hybrid. Hybrid means both e-ink screen and physical watch hands. It has a few health sensors, can display notifications, track workouts, send commands to Alexa if you want that, and much more. It's simply an awesome smartwatch in a classic inconspicuous design, and it has a hopping 5 weeks battery life, and it's supported by Gadgetbridge. Nothing can beat it in my opinion.
Nice panning and nice colors. But the white pole kinda ruins it for me, it would have been better if the car wasn't partly concealed by it.
I host my own mailserver, and to be honest it's pretty painless. Usually I just let it run without giving it any thought. It's on rare occasions that I need to put a bit of work into improving the inbound spam scanning.
Selfhosting does need quite some knowledge of the software stack and several additional protocols to set them up correctly to get your outgoing email delivered. Also, like already mentioned in another comment, you absolutely need an IP address from a non-blacklisted subnet (I think most VPS providers will be okay, residential definitely not).
My software stack: Arch Linux (soon NixOS), Postfix, Dovecot, rspamd, opendkim, opendmarc.
Additional techniques configured: SPF, DKIM, DMARC, DNSSEC.
As you can see it's quite a lot, and I've been doing for more than 20 years now, so my opinion can be a bit skewed. I'd say go for it if selfhosting is a hobby.
Agreed, Nextcloud News is awesome! The app too. And it's a given that Nextcloud itself is already awesome.
Wow, nice!
nix-init is just awesome. Thank you!
Honestly, if you don't feel like self-hosting could be a hobby, just don't do it.
If done correctly, it can take up quite some time, but that can definitely be worth it (privacy, freedom, hobby/fun, etc). But if not done correctly, that can cause problems in security, performance, compatibility and perhaps even financials.
Just find an instance you like (read the rules about privacy, allowed languages, allowed content, etc) and create an account there.
I have it running on an arm64 machine with NixOS. If you're up for a bit of a learning curve, try it, it's worth it.
No problem here with Fold3 on Android 14, luckily