I’ve had a variation on that with hot honey and coffee grounds. Mm-mm.
I’ve had a variation on that with hot honey and coffee grounds. Mm-mm.
I think you might be looking for something like OpenSnitch.
Found the Golgafrincham.
Sounds krizappy, my dilznoofus!
I’d second their suggestion of Tetris for this.
In keeping with current trends, that box should contain only a download code. (Which in this case I guess would be a piece of paper with a URL.)
Whose entire life was in a… what?
Hey, that’s the combination on my luggage!
There’s a lot of “X1 Carbon 6th” listed here.
I think that’s what it is, except my use of the term “block” was mostly wrong. This seems to accept them but keep them isolated, defeating their effectiveness as a way to track users across sites.
That’s great, but what’s the update? The Lemmy cross-posts from two years ago have the same title.
update: I read the post and the last paragraph talks about the full blocking of third-party cookies as a thing that’s “starting in 2024” (future tense). So my best guess is it’s that, but whatever the August 28th update was could have cleared all this up.
You could probably chain some smaller HDMI switches together. Not sure what the practical limit would be or when lag would get noticable, though.
Now, if you feel that the bare minimum is enough, then okay. But some people choose to play four-player Smash Bros. and we encourage that, okay? You do want to play four-player Smash, don’t you?
Possibly my light/dark mode scripts. They change my Plasma theme, which is honestly most of the job, but also set the matching GTK theme, set the new theme in running Konsole sessions, do a bunch of manual sed
edits on conf files for applications that don’t follow system theming, finally restarting plasmashell
to clean up the occasional edge case where a tray icon is supposed to follow the theme but doesn’t.
The post was about being asked to disable background blurring specifically.
It’s not for everyone, but if “collection of perl scripts” sounds like your jam, GnuPod still works for a CLI option.
Worth noting that it also has a bunch of free alternatives for sync, some self-hostable, and you were talking about the paid service hosted by the Tasks.org devs.