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What are your list of essential iOS apps?
  • Here are the apps I used that I'm not seeing.

    • FoodNoms for calorie counting
    • Waking Up for guided meditation
    • Finch for gamified general mental health
    • Future for asynchronous virtual training
    • Tripsy for travel tracking
    • Organic Maps for offline mapping
    • Transit for navigating most US cities via public transit
    • Fastmail for personal email (Apple Mail for work email)
    • 1Password for password management
    • Elaho for browsing Gemini
    • Tidal for music
    • Vellum for cool backgrounds
    • SwiftScan for scanning documents
    • iPlum for a cheap business phone number
    • Kagi Search to set the Kagi search engine as the default in Safari
    • Parcel for package tracking
    • Mona for Mastodon

    And I'll second some others.

    • Overcast
    • Bookplayer
    • Reeder
    • AnyList
    • Sleep Cycle
    • Signal
    • Obsidian
    • Vinegar
    • Noir
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    If You Were Asked to Recommend Just One Game, What Would It Be?
  • Yeah, definitely depends on who I'm recommending to. If it's someone who's pretty familiar with games, I think it would be Elden Ring. Love the sense of exploration and discovery in that game.

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  • Recent change in life circumstances, and now I'm trying to figure out how to be an adult about food. I want to focus on eating healthy. I have very little foundational knowledge, so I need ELI5-level content. I'd love some online resources that I could use to learn. In-person classes are not a great fit. Anyone have any recommendations?

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    YSK: This service needs more content creators, and you can invite them.
  • I would like to make a distinction between a “content creator” in the literal sense — just a person who creates content — and a “content creator” as the phrase is commonly used today — a person who makes a living by selling content or by giving away content to market something else.

    I, for one, would be very interested in seeing more people on the fediverse creating content, but I’m not super interested in the fediverse becoming a marketing channel for professional content creators.

    Of course, it’s an open platform, so pro content creators are more than welcome to join. I’m just not super excited about approaching them and saying, “please come hock your wares to us on the fediverse!”

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  • Cute aggression: a metal song about loving your cat

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    www.neowin.net Reddit now says it will allow free API access for developers of accessibility apps

    Reddit says that developers who make non-commercial accessibility apps that make use of the online forum's API services will now get "exemptions from our large-scale pricing terms."

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    What is your boomer opinion
    • The internet was way better before it became a giant shopping mall.
    • Those cars that don't have the flecks in the paint look like children's toys.

    Then, I have a couple that pre-date even boomers by many years 😅:

    • Handkerchiefs kick the shit out of paper tissues.
    • Cars have made the world a worse place.
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  • MetaFilter: The Community Weblog

    www.metafilter.com MetaFilter | Community Weblog

    MetaFilter is a community weblog that anyone can contribute a link or comment to.

    This site has been around forever. It gained popularity for a while when the Google search algorithm had it ranking highly for a lot of terms. That went away for some unknown reason with an algorithm update, but the site is still plugging along, its users cranking out quality posts every single day.

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    My own tiny contribution to making the old web visible again

    I put together a list of onramps to the old web. Very excited to find this community so that maybe I can grow my list!

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    EarthBound (Super Nintendo, 1994)
  • Just got around to playing (most of) Mother 3 last year. It has a lot of the same charm and is really interesting in its own way… but it still didn't hit me quite the same way Earthbound did.

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    Anyone else car-free?
  • I lived for 5 years car-free in Seattle. I'm still car-free, but I'm currently doing a bit of traveling so no longer in Seattle (although I may ultimately end up back there).

    It's definitely challenging. I wish there was more train coverage and greater frequency in general of transit service in Seattle. Back when I first moved, car shares were plentiful which made it really easy to hop in a car if I really needed to — maybe 5 to 10 times a year — but that whole thing mostly fell apart. When I left a few months ago, Gig seemed to be doing pretty well.

    I lived for 35 years in Knoxville, Tennessee, and it would have been near impossible there. Your world gets very small when you go car-free, and that's a problem in places where everything is spread out assuming everyone will have a car and can quickly traverse the miles between places you might want to be. There's a downtown in Knoxville, but until the last 10 years, almost no one lived there. There's a lot more housing now, but basic amenities like a grocery store and drug store are, so far as I'm aware, still missing. Downtown Knoxville is less a place to live and more a theme park.

    I was sad to hear the only full-service grocery store in downtown Seattle closed during the pandemic, but there are still plenty of neighborhoods that are totally livable car-free. Could be better, but it could certainly be worse.

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