If you really want an app, Tusk is great, even just the free version. No ads. Nice colorful icons. Smooth interface, good scheduling options. Some functions are paywalled though, like calendar sync. I can't remember if premium is a purchase or a subscription.
But really pen and paper is the best, imo. You can get little pocket notebooks. Much more satisfying and less restrictive than an app, if you don't need it to also be giving you notifications.
Edit: Tody is great for household cleaning todos/scheduling. Also free and ad free, except for some paywalled functions.
If you download ADB AppControl to you computer, you can use that to disable bloatware over USB. Do this very carefully (consult guides, and make sure you know what something is before you disable it, and don't use any program that claims to "clean up" bloatware automatically). But the great thing about this app in particular is it lets you just disable things instead of fully uninstalling them, so that this way if you fuck up it's fully reversible; if your phone mysteriously starts having problems, just remember that you fucked with it and undo any recent changes to see if that fixes it.
Anyway, you might get a noticeable performance improvement out of disabling bloatware (there's probably a lot of it), and you can remove various annoyances/"features" that have their "disable" option grayed out in the phone's own settings menus.
You can also look into 3rd party launchers, like Nova launcher - some people prefer those.
Also, check the accessibility settings, in case there's something helpful in there.
Also also, there's probably a hidden "developer options" menu that may or may not be useful to you. You can look up how to activate it - it'll probably be something like going to the about phone section and tapping on the model or serial number 10 times, or something similar to that. But I haven't looked it up exactly for your phone model. With my phone, I use this mainly to manually change the audio codec when other menus don't allow it, but not for much else. Do keep in mind most of the developer options are truly intended for developers and shouldn't be tinkered with unless you know what you're doing/have a reason.
Edit: I don't know if the s23 specifically has this, but I'd check the lockscreen settings menu to see if you have the option to add quick buttons to it, if that'd be helpful to you vs the power key shortcuts.
Unless the dentist told you one of the teeth are actively infected and thus time sensitive (to prevent infection from spreading elsewhere for example), and since you're not in pain, I'd suggest re-scheduling at least to give yourself more time to think about it. All surgery does come with risks and shouldn't be rushed into if you're unsure, imo.
If you can, ask the surgeon about how close your nerves are to the teeth and what they think the risk of nerve damage is for your particular case, so you have more information. And check the reviews and credentials for the surgeon, and make sure that it's them who will do it personally and not assistants allowed in the fine print.
Personally, if the wisdom teeth aren't causing any problems and the only reason to remove them is "they might cause problems in the future", I'd leave them alone. Especially if they're not sideways/impacted, but even then. But it's your body and your decision. And I am not a doctor or a dentist of any kind.
But probably best to take the time you need to feel comfy with the decision if you need to, either way.
The source code is arguably more comparable to the bicycle factory. When I buy a game, I'm thinking of buying the experience, not the underlying mechanisms.
You still can find ways to mod and tinker with the finished product you own (bicycle), but you don't have the info and machinery you'd need to make your own identical bicycle.
Or, if you buy a book, you own the finished book, but you don't automatically also own all the author's notes and rough drafts and file organization that went into making that book.
Try to make something deliberately bad. Like, aim for so-bad-it's-fun? Or comedic parody tracks?
Or maybe make little tracks whose purpose is firmly communication rather than quality. Such as soundboard-type effects to use as gif-equivalents when talking to friends - either to mess with them or to communicate "this is my mood right now" or what have you.
Or maybe take a break and do another kind of art for a bit, then come back.
LLM AI isn't creative enough to do anything more than straightforward copying. At best, it can copy two or more things at once and combine them, or apply a basic aesthetic/edit something to be visually "in the style of" a particular artist, sort of, kind of, not really. It can't be do anything with the meaning or intent of a work, or "be inspired" to create anything markedly new.
Like. Regular old human plagiarists often claim to just be "inspired by" too, even if they just gave a story a new coat of paint and changed character names and reworded some sentences. That's the level LLM's are at.
LLM's can be straight up directed to copy particular artist's styles, too. Which it knows how to do (badly) because it scraped their works without permission or payment. People use midjourney like this all the time.
Dude. It's called a pet peeve. They're allowed, and even people who have very stressful lives have them. It's definitely better than shit-talking random people on the internet - just skip the thread if you don't care about it.
For what it's worth, I thought it'd be horrible from the reviews and ended up trying it anyway, and I actually really enjoyed it. shrug Rather feels like I played a different game than everyone else.
I'm sure it's partly the difference between starting with rock bottom expectations vs starting with Prey/Dishonored expectations, but I think even without that I'd like it.
Also, it has no micro transactions! Zero. Not even for cosmetics - those are just unlockables. Credit where credit is due.
Anyway if you liked the look of the trailer and you have gamepass, it's worth at least trying, imo.
I wonder why they haven't tried the model airport books and comics use, though. We could do it with games at this point. Like, make a series of games that are low budget, relatively short, and easy to pump out very quickly, but with a distinct series identity and maybe a consistent writer/artist across games. Then make a lot of them and get people hooked on the series instead of on 1 mega game.
Even just text adventure style games, wireframe arcade style games, bullethells, shooters like Vampire Survivor & etc, visual novels, syuff like Undertale, whatever? I think it's clear that a low budget or small team doesn't equate to unpopularity these days, if the game is made with care and attention to detail.
We do have series now but they're high budget and long and kind of also trying to be the 1 mega game at the same time.
There's also a lot of options for reaching new/underserved audience. Like. Make a high quality horse game for once, please? And profit off a bazillion horse girls who've been waiting for just that for decades.
Or make games for other countries that don't have a big video games market yet, maybe. Like sell a console real cheap, at a loss, and then sell games in an area where there's less competition? Maybe.
I tried Linux (Mint). It doesn't even have colorblind modes. It threw weird problems into simple tasks. "Help" forums were full of threads condescending and trying to trick newbies into deleting the OS instead of, you know, helping. I hated the centralized launcher system compared to regular old .exe's that you can download from websites that have much better info about what you're downloading.
Also gaming was too much a mess. But that was very far from the only problem with Linux.
I do a hell of a lot of tinkering to make windows something approaching private, but it was nothing in comparison to the amount of unpredictable tinkering and extra time Linux demanded for my use cases. Ostensibly perfect privacy is just not worth it at all to me. I've got shit to do.
Game Pass is still $9.99 a month for PC, unless they upped the priced literally today. So $40 for 4 months, which includes new released games that are otherwise still sold full price, and narrative indie titles that most would only play through once anyways.
Their contract terms for new authors are set in stone, atrocious even for the publishing industry, and unavoidable for most because they have a stranglehold on the ebookmarket.
Honestly one could go on and on and on about the shit they've pulled/tried to pull at various times.
Anyway... Why would the hypothetical e-publisher need to be on the fediverse?
To be honest right now that just seems like a recipe for getting no publicity and no sales, which no author who wants to actually have an income would do just to promote fediverse. There'd have to be an advantage beyond already existing platforms.
You read about her because that's a heck of a lot rarer and more interesting as a headline than "woman dies in car crash" or "woman dies of heart attack".
Also sometimes trees fall on cars or houses when people are in them, too.
Edit: I am probably taking your comment far too seriously, admittedly.
If you really want an app, Tusk is great, even just the free version. No ads. Nice colorful icons. Smooth interface, good scheduling options. Some functions are paywalled though, like calendar sync. I can't remember if premium is a purchase or a subscription.
But really pen and paper is the best, imo. You can get little pocket notebooks. Much more satisfying and less restrictive than an app, if you don't need it to also be giving you notifications.
Edit: Tody is great for household cleaning todos/scheduling. Also free and ad free, except for some paywalled functions.