BlueAure
I use Materialistic currently.
Screen is probably broken. You might be able to replace it by buying a replacement screen and following a guide by ifixit. Usually pretty straightforward.
Usually, not adhering to timing recommendations isn’t going to damage a circuit. However, it introduces potentially undefined or unpredictable behavior. For example, if you are driving a pump with specific timing requirements to control precisely the amount of fluid passed and you skew the timing a bit. Most of the time it would probably be fine, but there would be the potential that it might pump too much or too little. For a low precision application like a sump that’s ok, but for a high precision application like an medication pump it has the potential to kill someone.
At the end of the day, it depends on your tolerance for risk. Manufacturers generally certify their products for the timing on their datasheets. If you operate out of those specs, you are taking the responsibility of what happens.
Don’t want to scare anyone off, but it all depends on what you’re doing with it. In personal projects, yeah I’ll do all kinds of squirrely out of spec shit, but I’d never do that at work cause of potential liability. It’s up to you to determine if losing a couple steps on your watering pump will kill anybody or not! :D
I recently found out about Axios which does short bullet point coverage of just the interesting/most important parts of stories. It seems to be a bit biased liberal overall, but being able to get the highlights without wasting time reading all the fluff is pretty convenient.
AndrOBD for connecting to my car OBD2 Bluetooth adapter. It lets you read any diagnostic codes and let’s you reset warning lights.
Aegis for managing 2FA tokens. Weawow for weather. MiXplorer for file management.
Purdue University still has a campus-only file sharing network called DTella that’s DC++. It been getting smaller, but there were a few members that shared 50+ TB at one point.
You should test it out and report back with the results.