If you want to host something on a Raspberry Pi, you should consider using literally any other piece of hardware
axby @ axby @lemmy.ca Posts 5Comments 83Joined 2 yr. ago
Has anyone compared this to a PinePhone?
I bought a PinePhone and it works great as a mini laptop to do light programming. But as a phone I don’t think I could trust it, and the interface seemed to need some work. It was cool (though awkward to control) running full desktop apps like VLC though.
Perhaps I should have tried a different OS though. I couldn’t tell how much of it was software vs hardware limitations.
Does anyone know why they don’t have a headphone jack?
The fact that even they don’t include one actually makes me respect the existing phone manufacturers a lot more. I always assumed that Apple did it to sell airpods, and then the others did it just to copy Apple or sell their own dongles/headphones.
But if even an organization like this chose not to include one, then maybe not including it really does make the phone a lot smaller or cheaper or waterproof or whatever.
That being said, I can’t believe cars don’t have aux ports anymore. Surely the cost and size isn’t significant on that scale.
Disclaimer: both for cars and my phone, I’m generally happy with Bluetooth. But I want the option to use a headphone jack without needing to buy or remember a dongle. It’s insidious because the kinds of things that you would need a headphone jack for are uncommon enough that you won’t get into the habit of bringing a dongle for them (e.g. road trips, full day of phone interviews)
I tried "Out of Space" last night with my partner and wow, you weren't kidding. I really liked it, but we died every time. Eventually we switched to the easier "zen mode" and were able to win a few matches. I couldn't help but wonder if the balance wasn't finely tuned for 2 players, maybe they balanced it for 4.
For anyone interested: this is a really fun game, but it's not quite as much like "The Sims in space" as I expected. It's closer to "Overcooked, but with some placeable furniture that you need to interact with".
If anyone knows of a co-op (not necessarily local, but that's a huge plus) game like "The Sims", I'd be very interested. Rimworld is close, but the multiplayer mod didn't work well for us. I think my partner's old laptop couldn't keep up at 3x speed, causing big desyncs. Factorio is great for co-op IMO (though not at all like "The Sims", more like Sim City)), but my partner doesn't really like it because of the gritty environment.
My raspberrypi works great as a backup git server, as long as it doesn’t fall off my table and get stepped on or rolled over by my chair. I also host a few static webpages on it for cooking recipes.
It actually has better uptime than my desktop, which I occasionally boot into windows when I (rarely!) encounter a steam game that doesn’t work well on Linux.
It does not work well as a DLNA server though, though it seems to manage lower resolution videos okay. I think I tried both tried reading videos from the SD card, and a USB external hard drive.