

I’m referencing events in the show.
Eskating cyclist, gamer and enjoyer of anime. Probably an artist. Also I code sometimes, pretty much just to mod titanfall 2 tho.
Introverted, yet I enjoy discussion to a fault.


I’m referencing events in the show.


I don’t think so.
The size of something does affect how much magentic force it can exert.
I know someone who accidentally underwent MRI with their phone still in their pocket. It didn’t go flying across the room or anything, despite containing permanent magnets.
The phone was VERY dead after, but no injury occurred.
It does depend on the machine, I think. More sensitive and powerful MRI machines can have orders of magnitude more powerful fields.


Except in the show, AI actually solved problems, instead of causing them.
Some instances have matrix spaces.
I’m in the one for mine.
Later Android versions also let you set a custom DNS in settings, so you can have DNS level traffic filtering without an app that does it via local VPN.
Symfonium is not open source. It is a paid app by a helpful and responsive sole dev.
If you want FOSS, that’s Finamp. But it is not as good. It does also implement offline play features.
The Symfonium dev has responded to and implemented two requests of mine, making me quite happy to pay for and mention their app.
My combo is Jellyfin+Symfonium
With Symfonium you can manually download playlists and favorites for offline, and/or have a “rolling cache” where the most frequent listens are automatically kept synced for offline listening.
My collection is far too large to keep on my phone in its entirety, but with Symfonium I don’t need to, and if I’m ever caught without internet, I’ve still plenty to listen to.
Jellyfin does not organize the music, it’s a way to browse and access it. For a nice client for desktop, look at Feishin.
To actually organize the music, you want something like Picard.
Eventually.
But the problems were more along the lines “oh no, it’s so powetful, it’s becoming god”.