For 60+ I might recommend ChromeOS Flex, Mint, or Ubuntu.
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It’s grow lamps simulating full sun brightness in a windowless room.
If an alarm is set for a time doesn’t exist, I expect a big warning on the Lock Screen that there’s a problem so I can fix it. Or set the alarm off early assuming that it’s better to be early than late for whatever it was.
Both are better than silent failure.
Elderly relative needed to take a pill 4x daily, including in the middle of the night. Every day. It was a repeating alarm set for 2:30.
We slept through it and they missed the pill. Not ideal.
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Try setting your alarm for the hour that’s skipped during the spring time change and see if Google thinks that was alarm was important to you or just shouldn’t exist.
Maybe the restaurants you go to have fewer options, but vegans go to restaurants that have things they can eat, and practically every restaurant has options now. French fries, for example, are a fast food item that’s usually vegan.
Yes. A number of vegans excel at endurance sports and they do that be eating and drinking boatloads of calories.
Did you read how any of the referenced studies were structured to confirm this assumption?
markstos@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•I swapped the entire school computers to linux mint2·30 days agoThere is way to do this that works with even older computers and is easy to manage.
That’s with Edubuntu and thin-client computing using the Linux Terminal Server project, LTSP.
In that model, you install Linux once on a server. Each computer in the lab is set to boot over the network from the server.
This way there is one computer to maintain, the users can’t access root and all the storage is centralized.
Even old computers with low CPU and RAM and no hard drive can make good thin clients.
A number of schools have been using this approach for 15+ years.
Years ago there was a voice to text transcription service sold as automated that worked by people listening to your voicemails and typing them out.