Calming the technology layer in my life Every details count when aiming for a calm technology in my life. From how I use my phone, my laptop, my desktop, my servers and media computer. Simplifying one elements ripple off in effect to the other tools. Today, I've simplified my cellphone UI even more. You can see what my home screen looks like here: gopher://gopher.club/I/users/gef/img/homeScreenAndroid.png I'm pretty pround of it, and it really annoys my daughter who loves more visuals! The desktop is clean black, there is no clock in the top bar and the color scheme is from white to dark gray. There are no visual stimuly, it's actually calming and... yeah boring, like what a tool should be. Efficient, minimal, somewhat boring. Would that be consider brutalism? It's not entertaining, my phone is not for fun. I can go for a walk in the wood, play music, read a book or watch a movie for fun, not play with my phone! This is the 'last launcher' it's an unmaintained android launcher. I probably should maintain a branch of it.... But my general inclination these days is to do less tech. I'd love to be able to boost the font size even more for example, something that should be easy to change in the source code. You can see all apps are replace with words, no 'branding' come and polute my use of the cellphone. I find that even banded icons, like firefox, or other tools still leave an imprint. I just want to call, I just want to visit the web, I just want to text, I'm not interested in using 'firefox' or other brand. The camera is activated with a double press of the power button, the flashlight by shaking the phone. Some other apps that I use less often are hidden but accesible. I've removed all email accounts but my business one from my phone too. So there is not much personal life to be reached out on my phone. There are no social network apart from gopher on there and I can reach sdf from termux. On my ferry travels that lasts about 40 minutes, I love chatting on com while listening anonradio on my phone. I'd love to find a way to broadcast from my phone sometime like Dj Markus does in his show~ I've also reduce my phone processing power with more agressive battery power saving settings. When the phone sleep no background process are running. And then today, I turned off my phone... It was weird. I kept on trying to wake up my phone, realizing it was off. That felt weird, but great. Like a glitch in the matrix. Why would my phone be on, on my weekend? How often can I turn off my phone? Why not having it off by default? I've also turned off my main computer, which weirdly never happens. With my laptop off, my cellphone off, my main desktop off, only my servers are still online and running. I have a couple server running and I am debating if I should have only one... I have a thinkcenter little machine that is pretty awesome but probably consume more power than needed, and a raspberry pi. I'm really attracted to openBSD and at the same time I'm burnt out of having to learn more technologies. OpenBSD feels calm and comforting, but having used Archlinux for the last 10 years, it would be quite an investment of time and energy for... a change of OS? Will it make my life easier, or will it bring more challenges? Archlinux has been awfully stable. I took the approach to have a very low tech stack. Without a desktop manager or a boot manager. I boot directly to the console then I startx, since it remove all these other dependencies. Then I run i3, which has been flawless for all these years. By minimizing my tech stack it create less of a surface for bug or problems. That has been a general rule of thumb in my life. How can I reduce this and that to be more in 'balance' in my life. Like, instead of needing solar and wind to fulfill my power needs for all I need to consume for power, I can reduce my needs to the minimal, then solar and wind can be enough. When eating, in oder to reach a 50% of greens and vegetable I can eat a lot more vegetable, or simply eating less of everyting else, so that I can reach that 50%. I wanted to start with running an openBSD server, as I think everyone should have a server, we should all host our own data and share that to the world. But it didn't run well on old raspberry pi. And on new raspberry pi it seems more like a hack and that real solution. I was given a think center and since I like my thinkpad laptop, I 'by association' liked the thinkcenter and the form factor is pretty sweet. So I'm debating, one server on openBSD to run it all? Or just keep on my raspberry pi? The raspberry pi is running some sort of debian in any way, which is not arch linux, so might as well be on openBSD for all my server's need and arch for all my desktop needs?