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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)AN
Posts
3
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66
Joined
2 yr. ago
  • I have no personal experience with it, but you might be interested in this completely open source mouse:

    https://ploopy.co/mouse/

    https://github.com/ploopyco/mouse

    It looks like you can buy a fully assembled mouse, a build it yourself kit, or do it from scratch with the schematics. Doesn't come with quite as many side buttons though

  • From the avatar wiki:

    The term "Avatar" comes from the Sanskrit word avatāraḥ (अवतारः), which means "descent". In Hinduism, Vishnu manifests himself as an avatar to restore balance on earth, during a period of imbalance.

    And there's a lot of overlap with Hindi Avatars in general: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avatar.

    So pretty apt if you ask me

  • Thank you for the suggestion! I've been trying it out for a few days now and it is my new favorite app in terms of design. I'm having a strange problem where it keeps logging me out every couple days, but other than that I love it

  • Games @sh.itjust.works
    AnExerciseInFalling @programming.dev

    Saudi Arabian government company is buying Pokémon go and 100 million players real time location data

  • They've been working on the redesign for awhile now, but the version everyone's used to (Teamspeak 3) still works perfectly fine. TS3 clients can connect to new Teamspeak servers, and new Teamspeak clients can connect to old teamspeak servers, just without the new features like screen share

    My group still uses TS3 on a daily basis on a self hosted server

  • That last part is a huge reason why I'm taking RSS more seriously. I don't want my information to be limited to what happens to get picked up by the news cycle or worse chosen by the algorithm. I'd much rather get the information from the source. So that definitely meets the criteria :D

  • Heyy I've been looking around at different android apps and I think I've also settled on "Read You." Thank you for the list, I haven't heard of lots of them like MariusHosting and they look interesting

    Which feeds do you watch for automation? I also like automating what I can lol

  • Selfhosted @lemmy.world
    AnExerciseInFalling @programming.dev

    What RSS feeds are you subscribed to?

    I've recently (finally) taken the leap into self-hosting my RSS reader, and I'm wondering what feeds everyone's subscribed to

    I've currently got some basics like Github releases for software I use, the great selfh.st blog for self-hosted news, hackaday, some essentials like xkcd, and an attempt at following new music releases from artists I like, but I'm sure there are other great feeds out there that I should also be aware of

    cross-posted from: https://programming.dev/post/26356680

    Programming @programming.dev
    AnExerciseInFalling @programming.dev

    What RSS feeds are you subscribed to?

    I've recently (finally) taken the leap into self-hosting my RSS reader, and I'm wondering what feeds everyone's subscribed to

    I've currently got some basics like Github releases for software I use, the great selfh.st blog for self-hosted news, hackaday, some essentials like xkcd, and an attempt at following new music releases from artists I like, but I'm sure there are other great feeds out there that I should also be aware of

  • This is super cool!

    Does it support things like max/min to simulate advantage/disadvantage?

    It would be really cool to mathematically compare different kinds of rolls, like the cascading dice damage post from a couple weeks ago (even if its not built into the notation, just writing out the logic by hand)

  • I use Duplicati for my backups, and have backup retention set up like this:

    Save one backup each day for the past week, then save one each week for the past month, then save one each month for the past year.

    That way I have granual backups for anything recent, and the further back in the past you go the less frequent the backups are to save space

  • I still think material design 1 (which came out in 2014) is good, which focused on clarity with limited space. The problem started with material design 2 in 2018, which pushed for increased whitespace and homogeny in design. (And Microsoft's Metro... shudder)

    Material design 1 balanced clean and readable while maintaining depth (trying to emulate 3d space by "stacking cards of content" with shadows). But since most of MD1 was guidelines instead of, like, actual components developers could use, it was a double edged sword of forcing people to be a little creative in making their own UIs but cumbersome because you had to make it all yourself

    Material design 2 tried to "fix" this by making everything simpler and shipping a ton of premade components that developers could just slap together and call it a day. Good for speeding up development, unfortunate because everything now looks the same. It's also because of this that material design started to "break containment" and appear all over desktop applications/websites. It's never good when a mobile design language is applied to the larger desktop space

    That's why I really don't mind seeing material design 1 on either mobile or desktop, because it was designed to use space efficiently and interestingly. Material design 2 on the other hand favors whitespace and speed to the detriment of us all

  • If you haven't heard of the game Blood on the Clocktower, you should definitely check it out! It's a bit more involved than the other games on your list, but it's become my holy Grail of social deduction games