I just make vaguely blob-shaped seitan, definitely want to give these shaping methods a try! I've never really noticed a bitter taste with VWG, what brand do you use?
rxxrc
Libnotify backends are D-Bus services, which isn't really something you'd want to implement in a shell script. Going by some source code I just found, it looks pretty straightforward to do in Python, so that's one option.
The easier option would be to use an existing notification daemon that lets you disable the default GUI and specify a script to run as a hook, but I don't actually know of any like that.
Are you aware of Redlib? Self-hostable frontend for Reddit aimed at privacy. I've never had a problem with old.reddit but Redlib has a bit of a more modern UI if that's what you're after. There are a bunch of public instances if you don't want to host it.
Otherwise I'm sure you could use uMatrix to disable the tracking (can't give detailed instructions sorry), but I'd argue hitting Reddit's domain at all is already less than ideal if you're trying not to be tracked.
Is there a reason you can't use the generic CSV format?
Regardless, I have tested and it doesn't look like those IDs are used during import. Import works perfectly fine with a Zipfile containing an unencrypted JSON file, as formatted by ProtonPass export, with all those base64 strings (itemId
, itemUuid
, shareId
) removed or blanked out:
JSON example
{
"encrypted": false,
"userId": "",
"vaults": {
"": {
"name": "test",
"description": "",
"display": {
"color": 0,
"icon": 0
},
"items": [
{
"data": {
"metadata": {
"name": "test-login",
"note": ""
},
"extraFields": [],
"type": "login",
"content": {
"itemEmail": "",
"password": "password",
"urls": [],
"totpUri": "",
"passkeys": [],
"itemUsername": "username"
}
},
"state": 1,
"aliasEmail": null,
"contentFormatVersion": 6,
"createTime": 1733128994,
"modifyTime": 1733128994,
"pinned": false
}
]
}
},
"version": "1.25.0"
}
When re-exporting those imported values, they have new IDs even when you include the old IDs from the original export, so they're obviously not being used. My guess is they're just some sort of random UUID.
I had never heard of coffee tonic, but I love both coffee and tonic, and it's rolling into summer here. I am absolutely going to try this!
I'm on Wayland these days, but if you happen to be using X11 this is the homebrew solution I used to use:
xdotool type --delay 50 "$(xclip -o -sel c)"
The --delay
argument specifies the delay in milliseconds between keystrokes; if you go too low on that it tends to break things.
Interested to see what solrize comes up with because this method definitely has drawbacks -- no way to interrupt it and if you accidentally paste something large it takes a long time to finish due to the forced delays.
I've never really had the need for a Wayland version, but I don't see why subbing ydotool
for xdotool
and wl-paste
for xclip
wouldn't work.
I'm not sure the invidious:
protocol supports live streams, it seems like it's only fetching a single fragment from the HLS stream. What you're trying works for me using a direct invidious instance URL, e.g. https://inv.nadeko.net/watch?v=cmkAbDUEoyA
.
For fun I did a quick check and based on GEBCO elevation data this looks like about 20m sea rise (I'm guessing exactly -- I assume whoever made the image picked a round number).
I could have posted what 2m looks like but at this scale it just looks like current Florida.
shopt -s dotglob
will make *
include .dotfiles.
That's just a one-time pad with extra steps.
Australia’s about as sparsely populated ...
Sorry what? Australia's population density is is 3.6/km², the US's is 33.6/km², almost 10 times higher. Even if you fudge it by treating the swathes of uninhabited desert as an outlier and ignoring them, you're still dealing with a raw number of people lower than the population of Texas.
Fair enough!