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yeah, that was one of the reasons as well. I posted the top level site for interest, but it didn't seem to get much attention. I feel like it'd be really handy for hackernews, given how many are transient workers (like myself). Guess we'll see how it goes.


Yes, I looked around a bit, and most of the questions asked and answered on that site don't apply to me, even though I'm on the move.


Silently quits on Nexus 4 :(


Even after a restart? Would you have a chance to share the log (if you know how to do it)


weirdly, if I show the open apps, it's there, but if I try to switch to it it just jumps back to the 'desktop'.

Yeah, tried multiple times, even killed the app and retried. Same result.


Somebody on reddit said it was using ART and crash. Without it it work. Try without it maybe? I didn't got a chance to test a Kivy application with ART yet.


Ah yeah I'm using ART. It takes 30 min to rebuild everything for Dalvik, bit too much effort when I'm out and about. Unlucky! Usually most apps work fine under ART.


Question - what gear did you take, etc? You mention the english breakfast every day - I take it that meant you stayed in a village every day? So no camping gear etc? Did you buy new supplies in each place?


Two of us went on the premise of a long weekend. We liked it so much we stayed on the trail for the whole week, and only returned home due to a prior appointment (which proved useless, drat). So we had clothes for three days and we did washing in the basin each evening. We had a small laptop, snacks, and not much else.

The South West Coast Path is dotted with B&Bs, inns, pubs with accommodation, etc. These are often placed at convenient distances apart, 10 or 20 km at most usually. Accommodation prices ranged from 50 GBP at a simple golf course (the room had no proper heat, but the lounge/restaurant was charming) to 95 GBP at the Tinners Arms in Zennor (population 217 as of this writing), a spotless room above a pub from the thirteenth century. The chef there was from afar and cooked spectacular food in this, the middle of nowhere.

You can camp instead, and in the high season you may even need to. We went in autumn when there were few distance walkers (downsides: not warm, some rain, quite a bit of mud in spots, every sleeping place in Porthcurno closed for the winter, but a B&B took us in and the local Elvis impersonator invited us to stay with him but he drove a camper van so...).


fantastic, thanks for the reply!


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