not portable or self contained, but homeassistant handles things like this quite well. you’d need it running somewhere else though. worth the effort if you plan to automate more things though
for people ootl on D like me, this seems to explain the problems: https://dpldocs.info/this-week-in-arsd/Blog.Posted_2024_01_01.html
replayability seems like the big advantage of something procgen like this though, independent of price. otherwise, why isn’t it just a story curated by the dev?
friends for over 30 days apparently for everyone here asking for invites
it’s a manjaro project, ofc it’s half baked
only sort of.
this is the original document defining markdown, and you’ll notice it doesn’t really specify a lot of the things that have compatibility issues across different markdown processors, along with allowing arbitrary html which really depends on where you’re showing it. There’s a list of ambiguous syntax here.
CommonMark is as close to a standard as we have.
tailscale also just has a button to buy/enable mullvad as an exit node. if you’re just looking for a commercial vpn for privacy it works well.
this just looks like poor moderation, enshittification very specifically refers to monetization efforts of the company destroying the platform
there’s also a ton of extra space once you remove the hdd, it could be mostly battery
it felt to me like coffeescript solved problems that people had, then js got equivalent features. arguably that could happen to ts as well
I’ve been using vscode in firefox via tunnel to my main machine on my android tablet and it’s been working well enough
no but I personally don’t use threads, and sliding sync is really nice. won’t work for all yet. here’s a more complete feature list https://github.com/element-hq/element-meta/issues/1915
the element x version has been working much better for me wrt sync speed. still in beta and missing some features but overall very nice
haven’t looked into protonvpn much, but it’s more or less a different company providing the same service. I imagine the differences aren’t too significant if you trust both companies
they in theory see everything someone does, but in the case of mullvad they have no idea who you are
I’ve also had none of these issues on jellyfin either
I’ve found it to be less strict than I’d prefer. Things like whether parameters are aligned or indented, whether or not the first one is on its own line, what statements are indented in fluent calls that have blocks, etc.
A lot of other formatters (prettier, anything for python, etc) force something consistent in those cases, whereas it seems like the dotnet formatter prefers to leave things as they were.
I’d love for it to be more opinionated and heavy handed if anyone has suggestions
I refuse to believe that people use a php style guide. I have yet to open a php file in the course of any job that doesn’t mix tabs and spaces arbitrarily on top of numerous other horrors.
Luckily it’s not often that I have to, so sample size may play in a bit…
Or 73% of a PS5 pro if you’re in Canada!