I recently read “The Cautious Traveller’s Guide to the Wastelands” by Sarah Brooks. I didn’t especially enjoy it, but it might fit your bill. The setting is explicitly multicultural and incorporates real-world ethnicities, but cultural difference is not an important theme. No stereotypes jumped out at me, although one might argue that some amount of cultural appropriation is necessarily involved when White authors write protagonists of color.
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a14o@feddit.orgto Books@lemmy.world•This book may not be re-sold or given away to other people87·13 days agoThis book may not be re-read. If you plan to read it more than once, please purchase an additional copy for each read-through.
The way I usually start teaching using the console to my (very much non-tech) students is set up a safe container and then let them type whatever, invariably generating a lot of error messages. Then I challenge them to generate different error messages, “gotta catch em all” style. Then we talk about the error messages and what they might mean. After this exercise they usually get the basic idea of command – response, what to look out for and how to compose valid commands.
I don’t know of such an alternative. A quick solution would be to use something like GeoNotes to take geolocated notes.
As far as a self-hosted solution goes, I’d just like to point out that you wouldn’t need a self-hosted database of places. You could query Ouverture (or Google, OSM, etc.) for places near you, and you’d just need to store the check-in on your server with a basic API. This is an interesting problem, and not super hard to implement.
This sounds like a good idea, but I think the problem here is that a lot of popular software runs great on Linux but is very clunky and ugly on other systems (looking at you, LibreOffice). So keep that in mind if you try out FOSS on Windows as a sneak peek.
Navigation on Android: Osmand lets you download and cache OSM data so you can use it offline. Cache is unlimited if you download Osmand via F-Droid.
You can put together a media server and build a catalogue so you can watch movies and series offline. Maybe not a huge priority in that situation but definitely nice to have.
Jellyfin is a good option for streaming from a media server to other devices. The *arr suite is an option for building the catalogue.
a14o@feddit.orgto Linux@lemmy.ml•ffsend: securely share files from the command line (fully featured Firefox Send client)7·22 days agoIf I’m not mistaken, ffsend generates a link that you can share with non-tech people (which is a big difference in my book).
a14o@feddit.orgto Linux@lemmy.ml•ffsend: securely share files from the command line (fully featured Firefox Send client)121·22 days agoffsend targets Send which is an actively maintained community fork of Firefox Send.
It’s not centralized, you can host your own or choose from the public send instances.
a14o@feddit.orgto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Can you recommend history podcasts (or similar)?6·23 days agoA real classic: BBC Radio 4’s History of the world in 100 objects
You can load bitmap images into Inkscape and manipulate them to a degree, but Gimp is much better at that. You can probably also load vector graphics (svg) into Gimp, but I’d assume they would be converted to bitmaps.
Vector vs bitmap is a good topic to be familiar with for anyone who works with computers, I keep running into professionals who really should know the difference but don’t.
Helpful answer: vlc, libreoffice, gimp, inkscape, zathura, obs-studio
Real answer: gnome, run-or-raise, foot, fish, tmux, fzf, silver-searcher, neovim, neomutt, vifm
a14o@feddit.orgto Linux@lemmy.ml•[Solved]I might have mis-configured something now my PKGBUILD use this vim like editor? I don't even have vim installed, it only print out plain text in the terminal before, how can I revert it back?1·26 days agoAs others have said, less is super useful, you should keep it installed. There are better ways to open text files with your preferred editor than removing all alternatives.
a14o@feddit.orgto Linux@lemmy.ml•[Solved]I might have mis-configured something now my PKGBUILD use this vim like editor? I don't even have vim installed, it only print out plain text in the terminal before, how can I revert it back?0·26 days agoLooks like less to me. How did you open the file? Double click from file explorer? Then you need to check your default applications.
I should add that Zathura comes with a minimal graphical interface and you sort of need to learn the vi-like keyboard controls (or look them up with
man zathura
). But boy is it fast!
Try Zathura! I’ve been loving it.
I totally understand where you’re coming from, and I’m pessimistic that any flavor of Linux will be an acceptable experience for the person you’re describing. Something like Silverblue may be least obstrusive, but compatibility will still be a prominent problem.
Alternatively, you could show them surface level cool stuff that’s easier to do with Linux. Like blocking all ads, running your own Minecraft server, downloading YouTube videos, building your own PC with cheap parts (and maybe even pirating movies and TV shows, depending on your own practices and relationship to that person). There’s a lot to love about Linux even if you don’t care about privacy and open software as abstract values.