Android Leftovers

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Motorola's new Android phone has a price that's really hard to believe | Express.co.uk
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Verizon's LG V60 ThinQ 5G UW is now receiving the Android 11 update - comments
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12 new Android games from the last week: The best, worst, and everything in between (2/22/21 - 2/28/21)
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3 Ways to Check Carrier Aggregation Support on Android and iPhone – Gadgets To Use
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Top 6 best iOS and Android games of February 2021 | Articles | Pocket Gamer
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The Weekly Authority: Redmi K40, Apple Car potential, and more - Android Authority
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Android Gaming Headlines: Stardew Valley, Huntdown, Final Fantasy VII, and More - Droid Gamers
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Best Huawei smartwatches 2021: top Android wearables to track your fitness - Mirror Online
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This Android flagship is the perfect antidote to Samsung’s dull Galaxy S21 | Tom's Guide
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Your Android apps can also live on your computer | Popular Science
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How to Reset Network Settings on Android
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Make Linux look like Windows - 2021 edition
Here we go again. Roughly three years ago, I showed you how to skin your Linux installation to look more like Windows, should your particular taste lean in that direction. It was an interesting little experiment. Also nerdy to the core. But apart from possible nostalgia and tech glamor, there might also be practical reasons for why someone would want to make their distro look more like a Microsoft product. And the answer is: entice non-techie people who expect the familiar.
Say you install a distro for folks with zero Linux knowledge and some rudimentary Windows familiarity. Normally, this is a recipe for disaster. I call this The Grandma Gentoo Test (TGGT), AKA how likely is the ordinary person to master the subtleties of computer usage without your nerdy help? But this is true for all operating systems, except Windows had been around for a long time, and it's the primary desktop interface that most people somewhat know how to somewhat use. So then, can you make your chosen distro behave like Windows, and nonce the wiser?
| Security Patches and GNU/Linux Security
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Audiocasts and Videocasts: Linux in the Ham Shack, Ubuntu Budgie 21.04, and openSUSE 15.3
| Android Leftovers |
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