Alright, let's just start today. I have a short little script that turns dhcpcd on or off, and saves the current timestamp in a file. Since I finally took the time to make a case for my Arduino and a 7 segment display (only took me about 8 years to do that ...), I can now use that to show the cumulated "online time" of today: gopher://uninformativ.de/I/phlog/2022/2022-07/2022-07-31--display.jpg Another cute little toy: When the script starts dhcpcd, it plays the classic modem dialup sound in the background. I immediately feel the impulse to go online just for a brief moment to check a wikipedia article or something. I could do that, but it would have been costly back in the day: We had to pay *per connection* as well as per time. So the mere fact that you're going online already cost you, like, 1 EUR or something (I really don't remember the prices). And then, on top of that, you had to pay per minute. I could optimize for this model, like having a queue of terms to look up in wikipedia and then do that as soon as I go online. Would that be any good, though? By the time I finally went online, I would have long forgotten about these topics. The beauty of services like wikipedia today is that you can look up things *right now*. As for "social media", well, I'm only active on twtxt and that's already very "async". I don't have to change anything there. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * It's 15:30 now and I've used 6 minutes of online time. That's much less than expected. Gonna indulge in a bit of YouTube now.