Ha, it was never my ambition.
Ha, it was never my ambition.
I make only static sites and avoid having any overhead. Just Eleventy for building and some minimal vanilla JS where needed.
Still waiting on my Katana Zero DLC.
Hmmmm. Not sure I’ve been in that situation too often. But honestly, as a young parent, my gaming time is very limited. Even if there is an important update to a game I’ve played in the past, chances are I’ve got my eyes on another game I’ve been waiting to play instead.
I would still do that, to an extent. But not if I’ve stopped playing that game for months.
I hâte to agree with the other person here, but I’m a big roguelike fan and I rarely dust-off one that I have played before. I go through a period where I play a game quasi-exclusively until I burn out, then I will probably never touch it again.
Search it along with “potato” and you’ll find recipes
If you do go this route, the best way is to make a fork of the main Umami github repository, then link that to railway. When you want to update, you can just sync new changes to the repo, and railway will rebuild your instance.
I’m running Umami on Railway (so not self-hosted), for two small websites. Works pretty well. I think Railway changed their pricing, but I’ve been grandfathered in with a free plan.
Edit: all of my websites are also on Netlify.
I dont want to see the words “low quality tooling” ever again.
Is there a list of supported devices?
Yep. Fascinating read, completely unrelated.
Or use their app on your phone, which will “detect your driving patterns” and adjust your rates accordingly.
But honestly, even without all that, modern cars already have trackers and Internet connections even without your knowledge. (Mine did a couple of impromptu OTA updates for the media center at the beginning. It also has an SOS button on the roof, which you need to be subscribed to use, but can activate the subscription through the button. This implies there is a GPS tracker, as well as a cellular connection).
This is what I’d wager. I remember reading that apps using Rosetta (is that what it’s called ?) take up more resources.
In case you missed brewery’s message below (as it’s a second-level comment): all private mode does is to temporarily prevent storing history and cookies on your device. You can set that as default behavior for normal browsing instead.
This year is the first time I’ve owned an AMOLED device, and had to pay a premium for it. I assume most of the world doesn’t have one.
The cost is really the printer itself and the time invested. This would probably cost ~1$ of material, and take …3 hours of printing?
I would have assumed that this happens purely at the mouse level, with no need for OS integration.
If you don’t want to code it, give Publii a look. Otherwise, my go-to is Eleventy, simple and clean.