

First name that came to mind when I saw the thread title. His new Weird Stuff in a Can episode was a fun journey.
First name that came to mind when I saw the thread title. His new Weird Stuff in a Can episode was a fun journey.
Stefan Milo - Been really enjoying his videos “digging” into archaeology and pre-history.
A recent food discovery (Well within the last year) I made was Charlie Anderson highly recommend his series on creating NY style pizza.
To test it you can just put it into the browser console (F12), but adding it to an instance will require it to be added to a javascript file that’s loaded and run on page open.
It’s not the most ideal way of removing the feature, but it depends on what you’re needing your instance to do. If it’s just a personal instance, then I guess you could just run this line via a browser extension such as Greasemonkey, which would remove it in your client browser (not on the instance itself).
This will hide the button from display so it cannot be clicked on.
document.querySelector("[data-tippy-content='upload image']").style.display = "none";
How kind of it to think about your privacy. Such a nice google. /s
Us (humans) vs. Them (aliens)
I read that book after reading The Blacktongue Thief, really enjoyed them both, but Between Two Fires was a dark tale of misery.
Wait, I can redeem cash prizes?!?
I both do and do not want to check that out.
I did web design in the 90’s and remember one customer reviewing the site that I’d designed her. She said she liked it, but asked if I could add something like that neat little paper clip she has when she opens up Word, so it can help people navigate her site.
Note: Javascript was in its early days around this time so the idea of a dynamic/interactive site like this was not on the cards.
Jonathan Keeble is great. I loved his reading of the Saxon Stories series (The Last Kingdom). I’m currently listening to the Warhammer Gotrek & Felix series, which he brings his great range of voices to as well.
Bonus note: He voiced Maliketh in Elden Ring and Lord Rydell in the Demon’s Souls remake.
Oh yeah, I think it was RES for Reddit that supported opening links to new tabs. So much easier than middle clicking on links (because I often forget and end up closing the tab).
Reddit is far too recognizable of a name to die. Myspace still exists today, as does Digg. It may have peaked and shifted from its original vibe, and will continue to shift, but with it it’ll still live on as the investors try to figure out ways to claw back their money.
I’m sure in ten years time you’ll be able to visit reddit.com and be fed some cleansed ad friendly news feeds snuggled between ads, pointing you to content funded by marketing money. Just go to Digg right now and you’ll see it.
This is like the discovery of the Rosetta stone.
I recently told a friend about it having read it back when it came out. I’ve since lost my copy, but said friend arrived with one a few weeks ago as a gift. I’m looking forward to diving back into the insanity of it again. It’s a page turner, and twister, and rotator.
I didn’t look too deeply at it, but I’m presuming the setup using websockets pulling live post data is just building up a massive dump of html over time. Would probably be better to handle how scrolling and post data works so that the tab isn’t just an ever growing dataset if the window is left open, have it flush away old posts and only retain ~200 in the live feed.
I could be completely wrong with this though as I haven’t looked at how lemmy works under the hood.
Switching song lyrics for immature lines.
Go to the gym. Running on the treadmill listening to an audiobook is great I can just zone into the book.