I'm an antifan of Apple but the M4 Max is supposed to be faster than any x86 desktop CPU, and use a lot less power. That's per geekbench 6. I'd be interested in seeing other measurements.
Those used to be called coffee shops, though now they are likely virus spreaders.
This is about installing on a Nexus 5 which is from 2013. Sounds painful.
RIP. I had no idea he was that old.
ELIZA? Or maybe just a rubber duck as used by programmers.
I'm not anxious about the election. I'm anxoius about what happens in the 4 years after it. Keeping me calm til November 6 is near useless.
NK already has missile tech, just not clear whether it has real intercontinental range. The US and Russia did that in the 1950s though.
nuke delivery stuff
That's what space tech means, I thought.
I just meant the amount of computation required of a gps receiver isn't huge by today's standards. Remember that gps was designed in the 1970s for use with the technology of that era. Today's stuff is 1000s of times faster.
GPS decoding is less computationally difficult than you seem to think, and in any case, in phones it's done by a hardware module. The Garmin Geko handheld GPS was made in 2003 and ran on two AAA cells for 12 hours or something like that. Today's GPS's fit inside wristwatches and use even less power. It's just not that big a deal. The cpu load of mapping applications on phones is dealing with the maps, computing driving directions, etc.
I wouldn't worry about map updates by internet. The roads don't change that often. You can update from a USB-connected computer once a year or so and be fine.
The other stuff doesn't sound too bad, though idk why you want a phone for the purpose. If the GPS is for road navigation you can get an old dedicated unit that runs on 12 volts do you don't have to mess with batteries. Those were nicer than phones in some ways. I still have a couple of them kicking around.
Browsing on a phone or with Debian works ok for me with Firefox, though I don't like Firefox that much.
I found Organic Maps preferable to OsmAnd but neither are that great. It should be possible to do something reasonable without a lot of CPU demands, given how dedicated GPS map navigation devices existed ih the early 2000s.
Yes if you ditch Youtube and anything else that requires modern codecs, that solves another issue. I've found Newpipe has broken a few times but it usually works, so that is what I use.
Modern apps and games (requiring GPU even) are another story, but let's assume you don't want to run them.
This leaves the question: if you want a BIFL smart phone but you don't want to make phone calls with it, don't want to run a web browser, and don't want to watch videos on it, what DO you want it to do?
I'll try to fill mine in today. It wouldn't have been any easier to do it earlier, and it's preferable to do it on election day or close to it, so you have all the information available. The main contested elections in my district are local ones, and stuff is always happening.