I bought an Animal Crossing calendar for the kitchen. It’s cute.
If you’re in the Apple ecosystem, use the digital calendar. If not, use Google’s. Set your yearly stuff like birthdays and anniversaries to repeat. Sync up between your desktop, laptop, phone, watch, whatever. Paper calendars can’t compete. Planner folks have been doing this for decades. Anyone can do it for free now.
I still have a Nexus 7 kicking around somewhere. I had it password locked and forgot the password, so I had to go back into TWRP and wipe. It’s running some kind of CyanogenMod. I’m fine with that. But it’s practically useless for anything. Maybe I could mount it and run its cable cleverly behind something, use it for… I dunno. It’s pretty small. Those huge bezels! IIRC the speaker sucks, but it could Bluetooth to something. The only wireless speaker I have is a HomePod Mini (Apple), though, so that’s a no go.
I bought an Animal Crossing calendar for the kitchen. It’s cute.
If you’re in the Apple ecosystem, use the digital calendar. If not, use Google’s. Set your yearly stuff like birthdays and anniversaries to repeat. Sync up between your desktop, laptop, phone, watch, whatever. Paper calendars can’t compete. Planner folks have been doing this for decades. Anyone can do it for free now.
The main reason I got the nexus 7 was basically to put calendar items in which auto synced when you got back home and hit your wifi.
I still have a Nexus 7 kicking around somewhere. I had it password locked and forgot the password, so I had to go back into TWRP and wipe. It’s running some kind of CyanogenMod. I’m fine with that. But it’s practically useless for anything. Maybe I could mount it and run its cable cleverly behind something, use it for… I dunno. It’s pretty small. Those huge bezels! IIRC the speaker sucks, but it could Bluetooth to something. The only wireless speaker I have is a HomePod Mini (Apple), though, so that’s a no go.
clock and calendar does not need much power or resolution.