I adored my HP Veer, I bet that if I get a working one in my hands I'll blind-type flawless again in seconds, I was better on that thing than any full size keyboard. Best phone I've ever had because of the keyboard and the ease of customization when you know Javascript. Screen was a bit too small (I consider every modern phone way, way too big) and speed could've been better but wasn't bad.
Logitech media server (squeezebox) with the don't stop the music plugin. It can use different services for context aware playlists and I found last.fm to be a lot better than Spotify. MusicIP used to be a thing on LMS as well, and probably can still be used, that's completely local but analyzing new tracks is slow since MusicIP servers are down (MusicIP got bought by Spotify ages ago).
I don't know for sure but I think it's the current, higher voltage will bridge a bigger gap/higher resistance but a human body doesn't have that high of a resistance and car batteries are capable of providing plenty of current (I think?)
That's a different problem (that doesn't really exist where I live)
This is why I trust motorcyclists more than cars. A manual doesn't change this problem, a motorcycle does.
Walking, or running, is good for your brain in almost every way. My depression was/is coupled with social anxiety so it was hard to get myself to do it but things like walking to the grocery store instead of biking/car helped me change that into 'I'll take a detour'.
The worst hobbies for me are the ones that are done sitting still, or anything that 'creates' a different 'reality/world'. For me that was anything behind my pc. Woodworking is better for me and allows me not to worry about social stuff but walking is definitely better for my brain.
2nd, but with just a bash script. Also, I'm forwarding http & https to different IPs and the best thing about cloudflare is that you can restrict those ports to only be open when coming from cloudflare's proxy. I like the extra layer of security, and dislike that they can see all traffic..
Basically every serious mailserver package has imapsync included. I don't know what kind of hardware you're running and what you expect from the server doing the copying but running webmail, search indexes, antivirus, etc will cost you ram. There are solutions aimed at keeping backups of your mail though, I can't give you recommendations, the only thing I remember is that they don't give you a normal webmail or imap, instead you get a web-interface aimed at searching through the backup(s)