++++ 12/18/2023 ++++ I have recently ended a job that was so bad that I used YouTube as a way to self-medicate. I'm not proud of that, but I am even less proud of the fact that I took the job. At least, I didn't do anything silly like join X, Facebook, or even go back to Reddit. I also stayed away from news other than sportsball... They're not going to get keep me engaged through getting me enraged about what I have no control over any more. Now that I am done with the job, I am on an information diet: no YouTube until the first weekend of the month. I find that the YouTube algorithm tends to serve me up more interesting things after I take a break, which allows for the alternate possibility that there are only so many hours of interesting (to me) content produced in a given period, but I think there is also an effect of YT just giving me more of the same as long I am scrolling, scrolling, but showing some real diversity in the feed after a break. But I hope that it is clear that it is more important to not be on YT all the time than it is to improve the YT experience when I am on it. In that spirit, I have made a Chromebook that I have recently broken out of chrome OS jail as my new daily driver. In true noob fashion, the distro I installed is Mint, but to show some real gumption I have taken the following steps: 1) uninstalled Firefox 2) instead of a graphical browser, installed lynx 3) changed the configuration file on lynx so it will ignore all cookie requests -- changing his first .cfg file... our little noob is growing up! When I start up my device, I just open up the GNOME terminal that ships with Mint (color theme changed to green and black, if that helps anything) and I just stay with the command line. It helps me to pay attention to what I really want to in life. I have keep notes on the books I read, nature around me, and the journal of my life and thoughts in text files organized away in their appropriate place. When I need information, I just jump over to Lynx, get what I need, and move on. Here's my bookmarks in Lynx: <LI><a href="gopher://gopher.floodgap.com/7/groundhog/us /zipcode">Weather</a> <LI><a href="gopher://gopher.club/1/phlogs/">SDF PHLOGOSPHERE</a> <LI><a href="http://www.ranprieur.com/">Ran Prieur</a> <LI><a href="gopher://hngopher.com/">Hacker News</a> <LI><a href="http://wiby.me/">wiby</a> <LI><a href="https://portal.mozz.us/gemini/warmedal.se /~antenna/">Antenna</a> <LI><a href="https://theconversation.com/us/">The Conversation</a> <LI><a href="gopher://gopherpedia.com">gopherpedia</a> <LI><a href="https://www.duckduckgo.com/">Duckduckgo</a> <LI><a href="http://www.frogfind.com/">FrogFind!!</a> Some notes on the list: Lynx supports gopher, which is how I got into it in the first place. It does not support Gemini, but I still follow along that community using the portal.mozz web-proxy to Antenna. Now that I don't have easy access to a graphical browser, gopher really is how I check the weather. As to when I have questions, I try to use FrogFind often, but it is sometimes down, so it is useful to have a link to Duckduckgo as well... The rest are there for more general surfing, which I am trying to avoid, but still find better than than scrolling through the feeds produced by the recommendation engines, with their aforementioned enrage to engage model. -- This work is hereby in the public domain. Do what you want with it.