

I primarily visit job sites with an iPad and stylus for plan reviews, but writing in a notebook communicates to the other person, in a tangible way, that you are present and participating the discussion.
I primarily visit job sites with an iPad and stylus for plan reviews, but writing in a notebook communicates to the other person, in a tangible way, that you are present and participating the discussion.
Who needs friends when we have each other, amirite? Right guys? …guys?
Maybe it’d be useful as a low powered interactive kiosk display? Price needs to come down tremendously before this thing becomes competitive.
My family used to put in hundreds of hours into Civilization 2 and once we were a little older we played Red Alert spending even more time building maps for ourselves to play. We could never figure out how to set up a LAN growing up, but it was a lot of fun all the same.
That’s promising. I’ll have to double check and see how I have mine configured.
Oh no, that’s my bad. I meant to write that as RP4P Retroid Pocket 4 Pro, not a Raspberry Pi 4, but interesting to know all the same!
That’s a rough place to be in. I hope it didn’t break the bank!
It’s recommended in the article as a third-party option, and I can still see some in the US store.
I feel bad for Americans that may soon be willing to pay for Anbernic devices at Retroid prices.
You could always try getting one shipped from a US warehouse or from Amazon.
YOU ARE NOT IN ERROR, OF COURSE WE ARE HA HA
So delete all pharmaceutical IP to make drugs accessible to everyone and save taxpayers trillions?
Is it backwards compatible with other systems?
Regardless of where it’s made hopefully it brings down the price of drives for the rest of us.
It’s short and worth the read, however:
tl;dr you may be the target demographic of this study
As if the bar for the “I have lots of black friends” defense couldn’t go any lower.
Super Scope, we hardly knew ye.
I hadn’t considered the damage from radiation. Thanks for the perspective.
It’d be a crying shame if the students were required to complete the school year with physical books and a notebook.