What you are looking for is called a book. It does not need power or internet, just light to read. The SAS Survival Handbook is good for all around advice.
Tile is the closest but it has a much smaller user base since it depends on people having the tile app installed. Airtags pickup on most iphones since most people have "Find My" enabled.
Or they are just not getting new users because they keep mucking around and disabling features. We used to have twitter feeds embedded in our websites for years and this just quit working over the summer. Now we have facebook feeds embedded.
I know, my car is a Subaru Crosstrek which is basically a lifted AWD hatchback. It comfortably holds 4 adults and bikes, kayaks, cargo basket with whatever thanks to a hitch and roof rack. Similar ground clearance to much larger vehicles.
I live in a large city and as of last year I have two choices for high speed home internet. I was paying $70/month for 300/20 with cable, now I have fiber and pay $70/month for 300/300. At least the first year was cheaper as a new customer and the faster upload speed is helpful for work from home.
Yeah I agree, though I always thought Narwhal was the second most popular 3rd party iOS app behind Apollo. Maybe those apps still open agreed to exchange user data with reddit or something? I just went to the app store for Narwhal and the privacy policy goes to a link that says its no longer active. Maybe that is an oversight or maybe not? I haven’t had an active reddit login for a few years now but old.reddit… also still works for NSFW views with no login.
I mostly just browse a few fringe subs and check to see whats on the frontpage and r/all. The general content on those has been really bad lately. It feels like a mix of corporate approved news, repost bots, and writing prompts which is probably what it is.
Not sure about Comet but the Narwhal dev made some deal with reddit. They removed ads and nsfw content and are going to release a subscription based model I think.
Yeah I noticed that, I think a lot of accounts that appear to be bots or empty are just lurkers like me. It's still the best place for sports news and updates.
Most of the basic tech issues and dumb questions I deal with at work are for people over 50 or under 25. Younger GenX and Millennials generally pick things up quickly and have no problem with basic troubleshooting.
We hired a receptionist who didn’t know how to use a computer. Couldn’t type or even use a mouse. This was at a small tech company maybe 20 years ago and she was 20 something at the time. She interviewed normally and I guess someone else wrote her resume. I don’t know if she thought she would just figure it out on the job? We did skills and typing tests after that.
Basically YoutubeTV has all of the ESPNs including SEC & ACC network, Fox sports networks, NFL network, Big10, Tennis and Golf. Also TNT and TBS for college bball. It lost NHL network a few seasons ago and MLB network last year though.
When NFL season rolls around I usually pay an extra $11/month for an extended sports package with Redzone and some other random soccer, horseracing, poker etc channels.
I never got rid of any discs and have been using them more lately. We also still have a few Redbox around for cheap rentals and the library for free check out for a week. Most people I know don’t have a Bluray player anymore though.
Most people are sharing where possible or canceling after signing up for a few months. The content is also jumping from platform to platform which makes it difficult to find. Some will “rent” a digital movie or buy a season of a show because piracy is not super simple. Others will simply skip it because Hollywood has been putting out crap anyway so why bother.
We keep YoutubeTV as a cable replacement because of sports. Everything else we watch on that platform is available elsewhere now including those Bravo shows ladies like.
Don’t forget to add meat, cheese, beans, hot sauce in any combo!