Don’t have time or a place to roll dice? If so, you’ll definitely appreciate the latest and greatest app from Tectra if you have a Wear OS device. Dice Roller for Wear OS has lots of neat features that give it an edge over the competition. Take the log feature for example. You can easily track your previous rolls with just a few swipes. You can also make custom dice, a handy feature indeed. Finally, if you want to roll the most common dice with no hassle, you can choose between 6 different preset dice. Fear not, as more features will be coming soon. Perhaps most interestingly, I hope to add the ability to roll multiple dice at once. Making this app hasn’t been easy, so I hope you enjoy it and find it useful. If you want to download it, click here. Thanks for reading and have a nice day! |
About a year ago, I reviewed the 2014 Mac mini on this blog. Ultimately, I came to the conclusion that it was still an excellent machine for productivity tasks, but it could also handle some more intense things you threw at it. Thus, it became my daily driver up until I upgraded to a 2017 MacBook Air a few months ago. That being said, I’ve still been using it some, so I thought I’d briefly share how it’s holding up these days. Here are my thoughts on this miniature Macintosh one year later! Performance Over the last year, I’ve been impressed by how much this Mac can handle. It’s rocking a 2.6 GHz dual-core Core i5 with 8 GB of RAM and a Samsung 860 Evo 1 TB SATA SSD. What all that jargon essentially means is that it’s a moderately powerful little computer, although it certainly isn’t going to put newer Macs to shame. Regardless, I’ve been able to do lots of coding, video editing, and schoolwork on this computer, and it has generally worked pretty well. Granted, it can take a while...