What are some good uses for smart phones?
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Reading. Books are super easy to ahem find. OLED screens make reading really comfortable at night. Black background, dark orange text, and turn off all the lights and it's like text is floating in the air in front of you. There are plenty of epub readers out there. Moonreader is my favorite. I paid $5 for it years and years ago now. Absolutely worth it.
wrote on last edited by [email protected]While it's usable and I've read material that way, I've found that I want a larger screen. I've read books on a Kobo e-reader, a tablet, a laptop, and a desktop, and those are fine. The phone requires movement to the next page with more frequency than I'd like.
I agree that OLED screens doing light-on-dark look great at night, though.
EDIT: YouTube clip of an OLED and LCD phone side-by-side in the dark:
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We have these amazing little computers in our hands. What are some beneficial things we can do with them? Websites, apps, tinkering... anything you can think of or things you already do. I'm tired of doom scrolling.
I use mine a lot for geocaching. The Seek app by iNaturalist is also pretty good
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Highly recommend Jellyfin on your NAS. Sounds like that is what your looking for. Very straight forward and easy to implement compared to other self host options.
Essentially, vid files located on your nas, and then any device on your wifi can stream the vids.
If your looking for your own personal netflix, jellyfin is your answer.
I considered Jellyfin many times and never looked too much into it, it is one of those thing I want to try. At the moment I'm comfortable enough with a plain old file browser and a samba share.
What I tried many times unsuccessfully is to broadcast the same thing to all devices in the local network.
My ultimate goal (or ultimate wish, I'm having troubles translating) would be to broadcast video in my network imitating regular TV. With a preprogrammed schedule of shows and movies, even better if at certain times it could pick something at random from a playlist or a folder. Yesterday I read that OBS might be able to do something like that.
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While it's usable and I've read material that way, I've found that I want a larger screen. I've read books on a Kobo e-reader, a tablet, a laptop, and a desktop, and those are fine. The phone requires movement to the next page with more frequency than I'd like.
I agree that OLED screens doing light-on-dark look great at night, though.
EDIT: YouTube clip of an OLED and LCD phone side-by-side in the dark:
I have a large phone and I make the text pretty tiny, but I agree. My eyes aren't quite what they used to be, and I can tell I'll probably be hitching the font size up sometime to the point where frequent page turns might get annoying.
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You can also borrow ebooks through your library's ebook app, there are a few types. I have signed up for many digital library cards with fake addresses, I get more selection and they get funding, it's a win for all.
I have the problem where I live in a country where I do not speak the language of the majority. Libraries aren't much use to me, here. I do have a card, though. I should see if they do the epub lending thing in English.
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Reading. Books are super easy to ahem find. OLED screens make reading really comfortable at night. Black background, dark orange text, and turn off all the lights and it's like text is floating in the air in front of you. There are plenty of epub readers out there. Moonreader is my favorite. I paid $5 for it years and years ago now. Absolutely worth it.
100%, but I prefer a somewhat bigger screen, so I use a tablet for reading in bed. I can fall asleep and not lose my place. It's also good for reading comics, which would be a massive pain on a phone.
I also second the recommendation for Moonreader Pro, though. The free version won't read PDFs, so the paid one it worth the few dollars to buy.
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We have these amazing little computers in our hands. What are some beneficial things we can do with them? Websites, apps, tinkering... anything you can think of or things you already do. I'm tired of doom scrolling.
Calculator, flashlight, camera, blunt object...
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I have the problem where I live in a country where I do not speak the language of the majority. Libraries aren't much use to me, here. I do have a card, though. I should see if they do the epub lending thing in English.
Our library apps here have books in other languages. Can't hurt to look.
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Any suggestions? I used to play Solitaire but the app I was using at the time had ads and no option to pay. I also played cribbage but that was a long time ago.
SGT Puzzles are small micro-games that can last anywhere from 5 seconds to 10 minutes.
MIT Licenced
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We have these amazing little computers in our hands. What are some beneficial things we can do with them? Websites, apps, tinkering... anything you can think of or things you already do. I'm tired of doom scrolling.
Constellation tracker and identification!