I've hit a stumbling block with the phone abolition project, namely, banking.
I am going to attempt to run my bank app inside anbox, fingers crossed I can do it. If I can, I'm gonna be so happy. If not, I'm still gonna be happy, because that device is going to be only ever used for this, and otherwise in a metal box.
Another project that is evolving out of all this relates to my abhorrence of the web browser. Namely, a dictionary. I'm not going for the hard copy solution, because why should I clutter my space up when I have a storage and encoding/decoding device with a massively higher word/gram ratio than any book????!!!! That doesn't make sense.
I'm trying out Artha. It is summoned by default with the keys Ctrl-Alt-W. Word, I guess.
This is very nice. As a programmer, one of the most frequent problems one encounters is coming up with good names.
It's my firm opinion that after humans finally have a Carrington Event after the age of electronic computers reaches its peak, everyone is going to stop thinking about the internet as something to count on. Good. It also will mean the value of optical transmission and faraday cages will become interesting to people who have got used to living in a fog of electromagnetic noise.
I can't wait, actually! Bring on the Carrington Event.
There's a lot of cool things to look forward to when most of the world's electronics are fried, and I for one, am not gonna be suffering.
I'm going to have my computer work space already prepared. Full Faraday cage, with earthing. Everything inside it earthed, no radio inside the faraday cage ,that's just stupid. All devices with added shielding to ensure they leak as little EMF as possible. I will have offline dictionaries, massive amounts of archival data storage, books, libraries, media, all sitting there like a little Noah's Ark of teh Information Age.
If you aren't already starting to think in this direction, that's ok, someone is. When your gear turns into inert matter, don't worry, you can come to me to query my database.

MUO
The 5 Best Dictionary Apps for Linux
Everyone comes across new words every day. With these dictionary tools, you can quickly learn more about such words on Linux.