iiab
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iiab | feeds | |
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86 | 42 | |
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9.6 | 8.6 | |
1 day ago | 16 days ago | |
Jinja | ||
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | - |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
iiab
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How would you work effectively with an extremely slow 56Kbps connection?
Use a tool like Internet-in-a-box and keep a "local" version of tons of very useful stuff like Wikipedia and Maps.
- What are you going to do the day wi-fi/data shuts off?
- Internet communication breakdown: are you at risk?
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Discussion: Do you think 'internet-in-a-box' would be a useful / helpful thing to bring?
Internet-in-a-box is a Free, Open source offline internet tool. Its a step up from having an offline wikipedia copy, it has a lot of Ebooks, and a offline version of Khan academedy youtube videos, and more etc
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Consoom soylent and Harry Potter movies
#1: iFixit is now available for offline use #2: Internet-in-a-Box - an Offline copy of the best of the Internet (Wikipedia, OpenStreetMap, Khan Academy, Stack Exchange, ETC) | 2 comments #3: Where There Is No Doctor - a village health care handbook | 2 comments
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Build a pocket sized touch computer for cheap!
IMO the best use case is https://internet-in-a-box.org/. You download a bunch of stuff like Wikipedia, videos, books, etc, and any device with WiFi can access them. Much better than relying on something like a laptop or old phone with all of these resources on them. Get a couple of Raspberry Pi's and some SD cards and you can clone them all and have lots of backups. They are small and use little power so you can hide them in places that can't easily be found.
- El Paquete Semanal
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I just bought the only physical encyclopedia still in print, and I regret nothing
this is awesome, but for those of us that don't feel like spending ~$1200... may I suggest internet in a box
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An argument for why we need to start hoarding books and textbooks immediately.
Not a hard copy, but unless you’re worried about something destroying all electronics, you can make an offline library with Internet in a box.
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Hardrive that has wikepedia prepper books & offline maps
Check out https://internet-in-a-box.org
feeds
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Show HN: I automated 1/2 of my typing
https://kapeli.com/dash
Somewhat similar tool to Autokey for MacOS that I use as a text expander.
Allows for great customization - appending ; to a phrase ensures you don't accidentally expand a keystroke into a phrase/URL/etc
";url" expands into "whatever string you configure"
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Custom Instructions for ChatGPT
This reminded me that I needed to settle on a good system-wide Snippets manager for MacOS.
Having waded through the morass of buggy and subscription-only services many times in the past, I thought to give the open-source Espanso another go, but its last commit was many months ago and I simply could not get it to recognise Ventura permissions.
It was then that I remembered that the excellent Dash (https://kapeli.com/dash), for which I had already paid a very reasonable one-off fee, has a snippets manager. And it’s perfect.
- Googling for answers costs you time
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How can I find what styles are available as an argument for a modifier?
I use Dash for my API reference, partly because it also has all the other references I need for other languages. It’s easier to paw through when you’ve got exactly this sort of problem.
- [Serious] I don't get why people like Mac and I feel like I'm missing out
- Zeal is an offline documentation browser for software developers
- help me out
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Software Developer Mac Apps
Dash. Look up documentation really fast. Also useful for system wide snippets.
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This sub turned me onto Raycast, but... No syncing of settings / keyboard shortcuts between machines??
Hey, the app I recommend shows you all the commands you need per app not just for macOS! Support for programming languages? Download this. For git, docker and neovim download this one.
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quicklisp-apropos: Apropos across Quicklisp libraries
Some time ago I had a thought that it would be interesting to make something like https://quickref.common-lisp.net/ but in form of docset for [Dash](https://kapeli.com/dash) documentation browser. This will give not only the search, but also a browsable documentation on all Common Lisp packages!
What are some alternatives?
kiwix-tools - Command line Kiwix tools: kiwix-serve, kiwix-manage, ...
devdocs - API Documentation Browser
Peergos - A p2p, secure file storage, social network and application protocol
sol - MacOS launcher & command palette
spksrc - Cross compilation framework to create native packages for the Synology's NAS
nango - A single API for all your integrations.
Etherpad - Etherpad: A modern really-real-time collaborative document editor.
zeal - Offline documentation browser inspired by Dash
collapseos - Bootstrap post-collapse technology
compress - Text compression for generating keyboard expansions
skynet-cli - a lightweight cli to interact with Skynet
Touch-Tab - Switch apps with trackpad on macOS.