The exact laws vary by state, but it's always "get the fuck out the way, as quickly as you can while being as predictable as possible."
I've never heard that you're supposed to not stop (if that's what you meant), but as far as I know, you're not required to stop if you're out of the way and not preventing anyone else from getting out if the way.
I think Mozilla was even going through and filling out the extension APIs on mobile based on what the extensions they wanted to support the most actually needed.
AFAIU, they're now getting ready to open it up more broadly.
I had an AMD Phenom-II era motherboard that claimed it would be able to do that. OP, you might be able to find an old NIC/mobo that could do this for cheap.
I think you might have misunderstood something along the way. You don't need to use Chrome to use Element. Element is a client for the Matrix federated chat protocol. It exists as a web app (that works just fine with Firefox), an iOS app, and an Android app (that's available in F-Droid). You can also use any other Matrix client you want.
And if you want to use the same account, the only thing you won't have access to is your past encrypted messages.
This is about "fees" over and above the advertised "price". So it says your plan is $65/month, but when you get your bill it's actually $95 because there's a "Cost Recovery Fee", a "Network Maintenance Fee", and a "Municipal Area Surcharge" (IIRC all real fees I've paid on an internet bill) on top of the advertised rate. They're often meant to look like taxes, but they aren't.
Meat doesn't grow in the suburbs either though. Plus if you're buying meat at a major supermarket, it probably didn't even come from your state anyway. Your proximity to the nearest cow doesn't have much to do with how far your steak came.
The best way I know of is finding a device that's supported by gadgetbridge: https://codeberg.org/Freeyourgadget/Gadgetbridge#supported-devices (be sure to check the warnings, some devices require you to pair with the OEM app first or possibly even keep the OEM app around)
Though, I used this with an Amazfit Bip and didn't find the data particularity insightful. It often was just straight up wrong about whether I was sleeping or not. So, I too am curious to see what other answers come in.
Ah, nice. I think that's exactly what I was trying to describe. Thanks for the suggestion!
Though, I think the git forge 'backend' + "Static CMS" frontend seems a bit more featureful and slick. I think I'm going to keep going down that path instead for now. Good to have a backup of exactly what I originally thought I wanted though.
Gotcha, I'm trying to find something that doesn't require me to use a local editor. I want to give myself as smooth of an opportunity as possible to write small thoughts. That's my current setup and even that little bit of friction seems to keep me from writing. (Or that's my current excuse anyway...)
Nifty. At first blush just making a static clone of a dynamic site doesn't feel as elegant as using a code forge editor, but I'll keep that idea in mind if I find the editing experience (images and whatnot) to be too clunky with the gitea suggestion.
I'd personally like to not depend on infra like github, but I hadn't considered just using the web UI of a code forge. That's a good idea, I'm going to try that and see if I like it, thanks!
(Still interested in other suggestions if others know of things that are more fit for purpose, tho.)
Your thoughts.
(And to a lesser extent your actions, but that gets tougher to define since external factors will apply more there.)