I had an air bubble in my brain and an orbital floor fracture (and I shattered my sphenoid) after a bike accident. when I moved, I could both hear and feel the trickle of air moving around in my own brain. it didn't really hurt (or if it did I was in enough other pain not to notice) but it was one of the oddest sensations ever.
or just change the folder ownership to whatever user you use in the container, but don't give them write access. that's how I do it so I can still edit my media as root.
you cannot recycle li ion batteries "normally". you should remove the battery from the phone and dispose of it as soon as possible. best buy, target, and some other techy stores take them, so call around. phone repair shops should also be able to help. a conductive container is also a bad idea. airtight plastic is the way to go if you're that concerned about it, however once it's removed from the device you can realistically keep it in any nonconductive container and you'll be fine.
fair, I just think it's misleading to call python procedural, but it lines up with what the commenter above was describing and searching for the term for
recently dealt with an issue at my parents house where whenever they connected the TV to the wifi, half the devices in the house would lose connection. turns out there was an instability in the Comcast router firmware and whenever the TV would connect it would crash everything else on the 2.4ghz frequency.
solution was to replace the router with one they owned instead of whatever crap they were leasing from Comcast.
and also because they continuously pick terrible candidates that don't reflect most of the populations views. and then they go and nuke whichever actually progressive campaign they don't like (sanders, hogg, etc).
to be completely honest, I think social media has less to do with it than most people are ready to admit.
other factors like usage time, intensity of use, and charging habits also have effects on the lifespan, so it's hard to compare one person's experience to a single other persons and draw a conclusion that's anything other than anecdotal without some very specific controls.
what i do know for certain is that the heat generation from wireless charging has been long studied, and so has the effect of those heats on li ion batteries.
yes! heat is kinda the worst thing you can do to a battery. I'm not a chemist, but I believe the chemical reaction that charges/discharges a lithium ion begins to breaks down when performed in a heated environment, and I can confirm that consistent exposure to heat is how you get the really puffy spicy pillow batteries.
yep! it's just less efficient than wired charging and whatever is lost in the process is turned into heat, which is particularly poor for your battery. batteries are consumables anyways and it seems like most people get it replaced at least once in a phones lifespan, so it doesn't really matter if you're ok with that. from my experience fixing phones over the years I can definitely confirm that using wireless charging consistently, particularly if you're doing anything intensive at the same time, will lower the lifespan of your battery significantly.
I think you could do this repair at home with no prior experience on a lot of androids. for an iphone you have to remove the motherboard though which is pretty obnoxious
ACPI is weird and sometimes hardware dependent, so it's really hard to support it on every device. that's my current understanding at least.