

Yeah, they’ve been doing this sort of thing for quite a while.
Yeah, they’ve been doing this sort of thing for quite a while.
Nope.
Kiwix isn’t a web browser exactly and doesn’t download web pages the way your browser saves them. It uses a specialized file format, and it can be used to back up an entire site. For instance the kiwix library has an offline copy of wikipedia (no images), but it weighs in at more than 100GB last I looked.
As much as I’m not terribly fond of the guy, IIRC he’s 36, which makes ‘88’ likely short for 1988, the year he was born.
and it hasn’t been able to capitalize on the many waves of exodus and twitter controversies for over two years now
Capitalize in what way? We’re not in a competition with Xitter or anyone else for users.
Yes, but not for a specific feed. It’s all or none. You could make individual url files for each feed and call them in sequence with cron or something, but that’d probably get unwieldly. You can also (I think…) control the format of the notification.
I just run a shaarli instance on an old laptop and keep all my bookmarks there and just access it from where/whatever.
Just commenting to give more love to helix. It’s my favorite “small quick edits” editor.
What war? And I’m pretty fine with much of the people on reddit staying there. They’re a good part of why I came here.
It’s pretty good for very early software. A bit more work and I’d probably use it.
Looks like a steam game page to me. What’s missing?
Xfce. It does what I want it to do and little else.
Xubuntu on my desktop/laptop, debian on a server. Mostly because while I really like tinkering with things, I usually just want shit to work so I can get something done.
RSSGuard for most things, newsboat for keeping track of software releases on github.
Xfce. Partly because I’ve used it for a long time, but mostly because it does what I need it to do and little else.
It apparently doesn’t like me using a VPN. 🤷♂️
Actually not what? And yes, I know. Apparently they think that’s a bad fit for the thing they’re doing. If you disagree, it’s open source, fork it and implement it.
I use piper TTS. Probably not as good as the fancy AI APIs, but it’s all local and runs from command line and is good enough for my purposes. YMMV.