You only need industrial robots if you produce something. Since a majority of production is outsourced to Asia they have a much higher demand for robots.
I also use an NTFS partion for shared data, even though I haven't booted into Windows for a year or something. To me the best solution is currently to auto-mount the whole NTFS partion to something like /mnt/data using the /etc/fstab file. I additionally use bind mounts to show all the content e.g. of the shared documents folder /mnt/data/documents in a specific folder in my home directory like ~/Documents/shared
Is this some sort of insider I am not aware of? I always see these kind of replies and I never understand them. Why even write anything if you don't have anything meaningful to add to the conversation? This is a genuine question to both of you. I mean, yes, it might be true that everything is fine and dandy if you follow good security practices? But how does that help a beginner? Its like saying driving a car with manual transmission is easy. You just need to know the numbers from 1 to 6 and that a higher number makes the car go faster. Even though this might be technically true, it doesn't help anybody.
If you are just using your phone, FitoTrack or OpenTracks might be the right thing for you. I don't know about the added weight thing though.
Thanks for the tip, I will check it out.
File Explorer
I haven't checked in a while, but I am still using CX File Explorer because I didn't find a FOSS alternative I like. Maybe it is just because I am used to it, but one thing I really like is the network feature that you can access local shares of a NAS.
I am not an excessive note-taking guy, but I am using Notesnook for some time now and it does everything I needed so far.