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https://blog.mobian-project.org/posts/2021/12/28/pinephone-p...

It’s running already (well as close as possible for mobile). But they say «in a year» it’ll be usable as a daily driver too.


I was talking about the official Debian project, which is stringent about non-free firmware and patches to the kernel.

Mobian and Manjaro ARM are much more lenient about patching up their kernels in the name of device support (perhaps to a fault, but if the images work...).


It’s the first thing I (Norwegian) turn on (or miss) in calendar implementations. Most things are based on week number here too.


I'm British, but have been working with Norwegian companies for many years, and while it took a while, week numbers now feel very natural.

For those in English locales, Outlook has an option to enable week numbers in calendar views, and mobile calendar apps have this option too (at least the ones I've used).


Ditto for Denmark.

Used to have an .ics laying around for that purpose.


What better display than the 15” to 17” screen directly in front of you on the dash in the Tesla while waiting out the charging session, which already shows all charging data including price? I mean even trains are going away from physical signs along the tracks to everything just showing on a screen for the driver.


The idea is to ensure that users are informed about the amount of electricity they're paying for. The number of kilowatt hours drawn from the charger is not the same as the number of kilowatt hours that end up in the battery.

Here's a demonstration on an Ionity charger with a Tesla Model 3:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PPrVZtzAqX4

In the end the charger delivered 65.5 kWh but only 61 kWh was added to the battery. 4.5 kWh is a difference worth knowing about.


Being billed for kWh at all and not time seems like a far more important part of regulation.


All the parts are important. It's regulation that has to be followed.


Not a new language, as it’s based on/similar to Ruby syntax, but the latter is interpreted while this one is built from the ground up for compilation/LLVM:

https://crystal-lang.org


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