

Super cool project. FYI it does require converting your ebooks to a special format.
I suspected as much since it’s using an Arduino Mega - very battery efficient I’m sure, but very underpowered.
I made LASIM! https://github.com/CMahaff/lasim
I currently have 3 accounts (big shock):
Super cool project. FYI it does require converting your ebooks to a special format.
I suspected as much since it’s using an Arduino Mega - very battery efficient I’m sure, but very underpowered.
In fairness, my understanding is that there are a lot of complications with adding distributed power to existing grids. That doesn’t mean it shouldn’t happen, just that there are engineering and safety challenges when power is coming from “everywhere” vs centrally.
And of course, there’s a lot of energy companies lobbying against clean power sources as well.
I know for me, at least with gnome, toggling between performance, balanced, and battery saver modes dramatically changes my battery life on Ubuntu, so I have to toggle it manually to not drain my battery life if it’s mostly sitting there. I don’t know if Mint is the same, but just throwing out the “obvious” for anyone else running Linux on a laptop.
I posted this on another thread about this, but I’ll repost it here:
I have made a tool that can backup / copy your account settings, subscriptions, and blocks to a new account: https://github.com/CMahaff/lasim
There are others out there as well if you look.
Obviously the loss of .ml communities would still be catastrophic to Lemmy, but at least your new account won’t start from ground-zero, and you can be less effected by downtime by having 2 accounts with the same subscriptions.
I made a tool that downloads and/or migrates your account settings: https://github.com/CMahaff/lasim
Not as good as something built into Lemmy, but it’s a good stop-gap in the meantime.
It wasn’t always an option - around the time of the first big mass migration of Reddit users it wasn’t something you could do. I actually wrote a tool at that time that could automate the manual action of re-subscribing / re-blocking everything.
But yeah, these days it’s a feature of Lemmy itself, which is great because it’s much more efficient than trying to do things client-side.