Gadgetbridge is such a fantastic privacy-preserving option for health trackers and it supports so many devices. Definitely check this list to find a compatible device
wow I haven’t learned anything from these replies, y’all are about as helpful as the French socialist party I guess
Ok, this makes sense, thank you.
I’m now able to access my Jellyfin server from other devices in my home. (A browser on another machine, and an Apple TV with Swiftfin).
If I wanted to extend access to people outside my home, what’s the best way?
Thank you
Vue is the only browser-based movie client listed on the Jellyfin site. Is there a better browser-based option?
Of all the things to Google, locksmith might be one of the most scam-prone
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Fun fact about the original Sim City: the lead developer said that they wanted to model real cities in the game, but “we quickly realized there were way too many parking lots in the real world and that our game was going to be really boring if it was proportional in terms of parking lots.”
Thank you for this clear, helpful answer
But… Why? Why would they get different restrictions on the basis of operating system?
This is the way.
Yo dawg, I heard you like bikes…
Sounds like that’s in here:
“The test build shows the horizontal tab bar and the sidebar at the same time by default. A click on the new “hide tab strip” button hides the horizontal tab bar so that only the vertical sidebar remains.”
Agreed. There’s a slight relief here, though: I believe this is the Times Square shuttle train, which only runs back and forth over a few stations and never goes outside. So at least you’re not on this train for long and never missing a view
Folks are asking “Why post this here?” I get the question but I think I also get the OP, as a New Yorker who was surprised to see this ad IRL.
Most of our subway ads are for VC-funded Internet darlings (think: mattresses-by-mail, kitschy underwear, online therapy) or for some aspiring blockbuster movie from an Internet giant.
Until I saw this ad, I had never in my life seen a subway ad for a company I actually used, let alone respected.
Seeing this ad in the wild broke my brain. I have advocated for online privacy for over a decade. I have spent so much energy pushing people to use Signal. But I had never before imagined that “online privacy” was a concept that could find an audience in mass marketing.
I don’t know if Mullvad will take off. But I know that seeing these ads moved me. I felt like maybe, MAYBE, our movement is breaking through.
Cool article but Wired already published this 2 years ago. Wonder why they’re repubbing?
This is a good policy but it should only be available to people who make 34.5% of the median national wage or else people might abuse it