Ladybird is not usable yet, but it’s an independent browser and engine that accepts donations
repo - https://github.com/LadybirdBrowser/ladybird
youtube channel with monthly updates - https://www.youtube.com/@LadybirdBrowser/videos
Ladybird is not usable yet, but it’s an independent browser and engine that accepts donations
repo - https://github.com/LadybirdBrowser/ladybird
youtube channel with monthly updates - https://www.youtube.com/@LadybirdBrowser/videos
ah my skip is 30s and I’ve only seen 2 ads in a row, max
IME ad times are pretty consistent by podcast feed when they’re artificially inserted like that.
When we’re talking product promotions during the podcast recording, they’re only consistent for a given episode, but that’s what sponsorblock is for.
damn, 8 times? Are your ads too long or is your skip too short?
video controls change when an ad is playing on YT, which would be a pretty reliable indicator for an extension running at the client side. But that’s more a UBO issue than sponsorblock when it comes to YouTube, as I’m not sure sponsorblock could do anything if the controls are frozen.
yeah, a few weeks ago I first heard a random US insurance ad or some crap like that, in English, when listening to a podcast from a different country. It took me a few seconds to realize what was going on.
We need Sponsorblock for podcasts
kali is for posers, professionals use hannah montana
These things are the other way around. The older something is, the more likely it is to find a bunch of questionable choices, spaghetti code, and security holes.
The questions I have surround the “since 2012” bit. FB exists since 2004, so what happened in 2012? Was it a data dump, a careless logger, system migration, or something else?
hunter 2
unhackable
an email for a receiver that doesn’t exist, more often than not, goes back to the sender after e.g. 72h. That’s by design.
IME they usually proxy and/or prefetch images for caching instead of blocking them. Only spam content is blocked by default.
tldr
I’m glad they’re moving the world update and other massive downloads to something in the cloud and on-demand. Anything between 10-40% of my “play time” on steam was actually downloading stuff.
they do
I’ve used plenty of sshfs a few years ago, but x11 forwarding is a compromise. The latency makes it painful to work with for more than a few minutes.
Same, ranger was painfully slow at times. For some reason it would take multiple seconds to start on a few machines I connected it to.
I can’t believe no one mentioned this, but: remote access.
I spend most of my day connected to machines via SSH and yazi offers a great UX with file previews and all. Using kitty I even get image previews in the terminal.
And I thought developers were bad at naming.
The Microsoft school of naming things is really showing their ways
not sure it’s simpler, HeliBoard even has glide typing if you’re willing to install the closed source lib.
what features are missing from it?