Also pastry.
Depending on the site it may or may not work, and can be easy or hard to set up (there are many ways pagination is done), but I found this one to be the best:
FYI, you can replace Steam Guard. There is a plugin for Keepass that can generate Steam OTP codes and it’s built in in KeepassXC (IIRC) and in KeepassDX on android.
I agree.
I try to use as much FOSS as I can, but nothing even comes close to Poweramp.
Do you mean the user documentation, or code documentation for contributing to the project?
While I agree that there are not enough good local RSS readers, I also think that some kind of state syncing should exist. I understand why all these hosted server side RSS readers exist, but what I really want is some kind of standard way of doing local first RSS (and not just RSS, this could apply to everything we use «as a service», but let’s keep this about RSS for now).
Imagine an RSS reader that keeps its state in a standard, well documented way, like having a folder where plaintext files keep a list of subscriptions, list of articles that are marked as read, tagged and starred articles etc., and you could just use syncthing or git to keep this folder in sync on all your devices, and you could use any RSS reader you want (be it on an android, windows, linux or anything else that follows the standard) and be able to seamlessly read your feeds and have the same state everywhere.
A man can dream I guess…
How does it compare to something like FreshRSS? Does it provide any kind of standard API? Do android RSS apps that work with hosted RSS work with this?
Sure, just as I said, this would work id you don’t need menu or fuzzy matching. But I would recommend using fzf history search anyway, it’s just too good.
Yes, as soon as all software you use in windows becomes cross platform. Big no-no if you use anything Adobe. Yes, there are good alternatives to Adobe, but if your colleagues use Adobe and you need software to work with their files, then maybe tiling window managers in windows is more realostic than just using linux.
Let me tell you that you can also add comments to your terminal commands and use them to search history using fzf. This might sound confusing but basically you do this:
commandwithweirdoptions --option1=value1 --option2=value2 # run the usual thing
Then you press Ctrl+R and type anything like «the thing», it uses fuzzy matching and finds the command in history, with a menu of other similar commands. Press enter, done.
Note that you need to have fzf installed, otherwise there is no fuzzy matching and no menu of matching history results.
There is also «Praise my github»: https://praise-me.fly.dev/
Of course, RSS is the way. I mean, emails are good, but they were meant for 2 way communication. When you want to have a 1 way communication channel, RSS is always preferred, IMHO.
Even 1 RSS feed for all comments (in any location) is better than no RSS fees at all.
If I use this to make some kind of a «guest book» page on my personal site, is there a way to have an RSS feed of all posted comments? I don’t think I’ll be checking the page every day but I want to be notified when there is a new comment.
I use tree style tabs and it also has an option to unload tabs. I might be wrong and there is a plugin for TST that adds this functionality though.
Fixed an issue where the Private Window icon was displayed in the taskbar on Windows when browser.privateWindowSeparation.enabled was set to false.
Oh thoanks, now I’m happy.
Eh, I wish it wasn’t docker only.
I want to apt install stuff or at least download and run a binary, but not docker.
Can users self host that and set up clients to use their own servers?
Just wanted to say that I like Chrono app, dev responded to me and added the feature I need real quick.
Unfortunately it happened to me a few times that alarm didn’t work in «on specified week days» mode. I woke up naturally in time though. It’s possible that this is a bug in MIUI specifically.
In normal mode (where you turn the alarm on to trigger tomorrow) it works perfect for me.