I thought I thanked you for this at the time, but it seems I didn’t. Sorry about that. This post has been invaluable to me and has coloured how I’ve been aiming to build out my network. Thank you so much!
Born and raised in London. Just a normal guy with a moral compass.
I thought I thanked you for this at the time, but it seems I didn’t. Sorry about that. This post has been invaluable to me and has coloured how I’ve been aiming to build out my network. Thank you so much!
Ain’t nobody want this
However, he also clarified that plans for this were not finalized yet, and if it were to happen, it would be optional for VLC users.
Happy to see some sanity prevails.
Having read the article, it sounds like the logical evolution of VLC. FAST Channels are here to stay and they actually are a vital thing in a world where Google have a monopoly on online video. While they’re not what I would go for, I’m glad they’re available as even my cable provider offers FAST channels.
Will be interesting to see VLC compete with JWPlayer and the various forks of it.
Also I don’t think anyone disagrees that the core needs rewriting and the UI needs a refresh. Wonder when Android will start seeing these builds on the beta channel.
The Immich logo is a massive improvement.
Out of curiosity, why isn’t this stuff done by default?
Good luck!
Transparency is a beautiful thing, always!
My post covers all of your points.
This is a weird one. On the one hand, we have Mozilla, the last remaining browser company not sucking at the teat of either Google or Apple and we all expect for Mozilla to somehow generate enough money to pay enough employees to stay competitive on the other hand we have the users who expect them not to do anything to try and leverage their userbase to create financial independence.
The problem with Mozilla remains the same problem that they’ve had for a while. Mozilla doesn’t acknowledge the symbiotic relationship it has with its community and the community always over reacts, which means there’s a chasm where simple things should be easy but they’re not.
Take this for example, Mozilla only had to have a public facing discussion about this and then go and do it anyway.
Sometimes paying lip service works. But since they didn’t, you have people like OP who feel like something nefarious is happening and in the end Firefox users lose out as things like donations being pulled hurt.
Mozilla already shows ads, as do all the other browsers, however unlike the other browsers, you have a fully functioning uBlock that can and will remove anything that the preferences don’t cover.
Yep, create an automation and have the schedule (time/date) as the trigger
No one actually believes that Tumblr will implement AP
Fuxake! Now I’ve gotta move my blog?
Seems this is what I should do too
So, I tried to install this on my Raspberry Pi, only to find out it doesn’t have ARM64 support, which is kind of alarming. It’s a shame, but indicative of the lack of commits. I hope the project can find a new lease of life, but for now Huginn isn’t a viable option for me at least.
Them turning it up would be good. Also shouldn’t there be a duplicate post check built into the platform?
The OpenWRT one
I was reading the comments on the OpenWRT forums about the new router, even the people there feel it’s underpowered.
If it can run OpenWRT and PiHole, I’ll be happy.
I tried to look this up in a search engine and got nothing back, what is this?
Ah okay. Thank you for making the time to respond.
Thank you very much. I looked at their Github and saw a couple channels for releases and made a poor assumption. Thanks for sharing your insight.
Just wanted to say thanks, I ended up going with n8n.
You should add a community for it over on one of your instances.