I believe programming.dev is the main instance for all programming related communities that left reddit.
I believe programming.dev is the main instance for all programming related communities that left reddit.
Which is why all browsers cross identify as other browsers. This would make it easier for sites to block and harder for browsers to work around.
After Google approval, what is the size of the tester pool?
Had the same thought. Glad it’s not just me.
Coming in hot with the real answer as to why it feels that way on the fediverse relative to the rest of the internet.
Sshfs to Nas? Does that mean you have a persistent ssh session open from your host and are using it as a file system to a self hosted Nas at your home? Or did I misunderstand that?
Where do you think is a reasonable price? Search is something most folks use daily, multiple times per day. If the quality of results is good, that seems like a small price to pay. Netflix is pushing 20 a month, and many other streaming services are in the 10—15 range.
Sad thing is, plenty of people will lap this up as a good thing and see it as a benefit. At least at first, until they realize they have to watch some TV based ads before they watch the ad roll on their YouTube video, followed by the second screen showing some banner ad the whole time. Yick.
Can’t argue with that. It’s not cheap, but it’s fully self hosted and works offline and that’s hard to beat.
From kbin, you can just boost it right from the web site.
Unifi has good equipment, works very well with a small self hosed cloud key or dream machine.
It’s always been cool, but a lot of people gave it up due to lack of good quality tools and content sites actively working against it. Glad to see the community is still alive and trying to get back to it.
I’m a big user user of weather.gov, but curious what you mean by blaming weather service for this not being convenient?
This is a tricky problem to solve for sure. I’ve been battling it for a while myself.
While true, they can still give you a hard time. If you simply don’t have one they can’t do much about that.
Seems like a strange way to enforce it, at the user level vs the api client level, unless they’re trying to guard against screen scraper types.
I’m out of the loop, what’s going on with plex?
Depends on your use case. If you just want the content removed from their database (assuming they aren’t tracking versions or edits themselves) then a few hour bake is probably sufficient. Realistically probably good to delete immediately after the edit, but better to be safe and wait.
The more difficult to quantify problem are reddit content sucker’s that have copied content from reddit, and there maybe no deleting from those unless they refresh data directly which is unlikely.
Didn’t even know this was a thing, and since I live by multiple monitors, this makes me glad I’ve held off.