Mastodon is mentioned a little lower.
Mastodon is mentioned a little lower.
I mean, it doesn’t necessarily mean the app is dead, maybe it’s just still working as intended?
Looks like there are just more translations in the gitlab history, but no new releases since 2021.
Looks like it hasn’t been updated in 3 years. Is it still maintained?
Ha, it was never my ambition.
I make only static sites and avoid having any overhead. Just Eleventy for building and some minimal vanilla JS where needed.
Its probably the “each other” that makes it trickier. I do ping my watch with an audible ring from my watch to find it, even though it’s always on silent.
I disagree. Having your phone on silent isn’t an out-of-the-ordinary use.
I despise listening to various pings, but still want my phone to vibrate and the screen to turn on. Most people at work/school do the same.
“Do not disturb” is for specific, short durations, or while you sleep (if you don’t turn your phone off).
If you do go this route, the best way is to make a fork of the main Umami github repository, then link that to railway. When you want to update, you can just sync new changes to the repo, and railway will rebuild your instance.
I’m running Umami on Railway (so not self-hosted), for two small websites. Works pretty well. I think Railway changed their pricing, but I’ve been grandfathered in with a free plan.
Edit: all of my websites are also on Netlify.
I dont want to see the words “low quality tooling” ever again.
Is there a list of supported devices?
This is what I’d wager. I remember reading that apps using Rosetta (is that what it’s called ?) take up more resources.
In case you missed brewery’s message below (as it’s a second-level comment): all private mode does is to temporarily prevent storing history and cookies on your device. You can set that as default behavior for normal browsing instead.
This year is the first time I’ve owned an AMOLED device, and had to pay a premium for it. I assume most of the world doesn’t have one.
I think it really depends on your location. I use AccuWeather, but I’m not yet convinced of its accuracy.
Not FOSS, but free and ad-free, from a small Japanese developer: Weawow. The only thing that requires you to make a small donation is to unlock a couple of weather providers, but you have a big selection without it.
Doesn’t magic wormhole do that? I remember there used to be a few websites providing a web interface for it, but I can’t seem to find them anymore.