Write for 1 person
[...] Instead, I picture a specific person and I just write for them. Often this person is "me, but 3 years ago" or a good friend.
Great writing advice from Julia Evans.
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[...] Instead, I picture a specific person and I just write for them. Often this person is "me, but 3 years ago" or a good friend.
Great writing advice from Julia Evans.
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Since the end of last month, I no longer see new podcast episodes for a podcast that produces daily episodes.
No amount of refreshing or unsubscribing/re-subscribing helped so far.
Especially annoying is that the episodes are there when searching for them, but do not show up in the subscribed podcast while episodes of other podcasts show up without any issues.
Today I finally found a way to fix it:
Volker explains in a post how he uses the Brave Browser.
The DuckDuckGo No-AI Search extension sounds intrigueing and thus I installed it for my Brave Browser.
Will see how this performs in the long term and hopefully improves my personal web search experience.
Happy 24th birthday, x-log 🥳
Nice writeup by Alex, how to render a chat thread in CSS: Rendering a chat thread in CSS and JavaScript
Might be fun to try this on a future re-design of the blog 🤔
A choose-your-own-adventure guide to understanding, deploying, and supporting passkeys
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Disable Apple Creator Studio update popup in iWork (Keynote, Pages, Numbers)
defaults write com.apple.iWork.Pages TSADisableUpdateNotifications -bool yes defaults write com.apple.iWork.Keynote TSADisableUpdateNotifications -bool yes defaults write com.apple.iWork.Numbers TSADisableUpdateNotifications -bool yes
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Passweird - Passwords too Gross to Steal
This website will create for you passwords that are not only secure*, but also so utterly repulsive that not even the most hardened criminal, identity thief, NSA agent, or jealous boyfriend would ever want to use them.
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The Multiple URLs in Git Remote article explaines how git handles multiple URLs.
Biggest takeaway for me is that you can have git push transparently push to two URLs at the same time.
Might become handy in all the ongoing discussions about GitHub reliability…
Blog Quest is a Firefox extension by Robert Alexander that quietly collects RSS feeds when you surf the web.
I like the idea of passively collecting feeds of websites I potentially find interesting, all while preserving my privacy and being unintrusive (no notifications, popups or similar).
Installed it today and already looking forward to review my surfing from time to time 😎