Mozilla Thunderbird (portable) - email client (multiple accounts, gmail support, spell checker, tabs, quick filter, master password protection, add-ons, themes, dark mode...)
Hands down the best when it helps with organization of all my resources ontop of categorizing per language.
For example: https://papaly.com/lokmansalikoon/0rGj/Coding-Resources
Writing something to scratch your own itch and posting it for others to use if it suits them doesn't entitle anyone to your resources, and that's how an awful lot of my favorite software came to be. If you're setting out to develop software for other people, it's a dick move to not listen to users (See: gnome foundation, most commercial software), but still, if you have an idea and put the work in to make it happen, I have a hard time claiming you're entirely in the wrong for trying it (even when it breaks my use case and I hate you, or you're engaged in building software that trains learned helplessness and doing what I perceive as social harm).
I despise the current trend where "not nice to me" is conflated with "wrong."
Case:
I adore Tiny Tiny RSS, it does pretty much exactly what I want, and I have it because someone else with the same itch was nice enough to share their solution. Fox (the author) is a giant asshole to anyone who shows up acting entitled or failing to do due diligence, especially post-google-reader, and it's almost a bonus feature: no bloat, no feature churn, no mailing list drama, no forum cesspool like the Android world, just Fox's software, enhanced with patches or ideas that help or don't interfere with his use case. It'll suck if it ceases to suit me, and along with any similarly affected users I'll have have to decide what to do (Fork from old version? Maintain patches to new version? Suck it up? Use something else?) but even with that, it's vastly more "mine" than most commercial or any "cloud" software. I've even kicked him a couple bucks for the Android app and still feel that way, because the comparison is getting equivalent functionality some other way.
I personally use Papaly which helps me organize all my daily links. Definitely a plus if you're like me and have hundreds of bookmarks.
EDIT: One of my many boards for an example https://papaly.com/lokmansalikoon/4l7t/LifeHack
the subbox is and has been bad for a long time which is why i switched to using feedly a rss reader instead and i can only recommend it.
here is how you export your subscriptions:
You guys might also like https://visualping.io, which lets you scan for differences in pages, etc. I use it to see when waiting for thing to be back in stock, book releases, etc but you might find a use for GME research as well!
Personally the only thing I miss from Firefox at this point a better new tab page. With custom speed dials, folders that uses the whole space. (kinda like in vivaldi or something similar to papaly would work for me as well). I really hope that one day we'll see a test pilot about this.
Anyway, keep up the good work guys!
I have way too many bookmarks and resources when it comes to programming. I just sort each language or type in each board to check for reference.
To be technically corerct, support for movemail accounts was removed from TB in version 87. Change log.
This was a useful feature. TB would pull Linux system spool mail into a local TB account. This allowed users, even simple home users and not just admins, to view the system mail in a GUI mail client.
For many years I used the TB movemail feature. For years I have had all systems in the home LAN forward system mails to my primary account on the office desktop, which is where I use TB for all mail, including online addresses. The TB movemail feature was wonderfully handy to consolidate and read all system mails in a GUI mail client.
If using a GUI mail client is desired to read spool mail then an alternate client such as Sylpheed is needed. Of course, if TB is the primary mail client then this requires using two different clients. There are console options such as mutt, [al]pine, and mailx. As mentioned a full blown mail system could be installed and configured to forward system mails to a fully qualified mail address.
I get that the feature might have been used by few people. And that we Linux users are not a majority. Removing that feature is one thing. That the feature was removed quietly without notable forewarning is frustrating because few TB users are going to follow bug reports. A change log note is ex post facto and surprises users.
(Snarky side comment: I detest rapid release.)
Add your account to Thunderbird, which is one of the most capable e-mail clients. It looks old-school, but it's a highly sophisticated program. After it has imported all of your messages (which may take a while depending on your Internet connection and computer), go to Extras -> Add-ons and search for this add-on:
https://addons.thunderbird.net/en-US/thunderbird/addon/importexporttools-ng/
After having installed it, click on one of the e-mails, press CTRL-A to select all messages, then click on file in the top left corner of the program -> Save selected messages -> PDF format. It'll bring up a bunch of warnings, including that you can't re-import these files into the e-mail client and that attachments will not be saved. Confirm these warnings and it'll save the files to a folder specified by you. Make sure there's plenty of space on your storage device and don't do this five minutes before the end of your shift, as this should take a few minutes.
Note that if you want embedded remote pictures to be saved in these PDFs (which Thunderdbird hides by default for safety and privacy reasons), you need to go to Thunderbird's privacy settings and tick "Allow remote content in messages" before doing the above.
You should really check out Papaly if you have that many bookmarks. Also, I'm surprised Google hasn't done anything to their Bookmarker since majority of their community dislikes it.
Which online tools have you tried using before? For me personally, I use Papaly as my main organizer and resource tool. It really depends on what flows perfectly for you as a designer. Of course, I have my handy sketch book and whiteboard on the side!
My Web Design Board: https://papaly.com/lokmansalikoon/0t7t/Design-Resources
I found Google bookmarks extremely frustrating to use ontop of the constant destruction of their UI/UX. Their new "old" interface made it impossible to organize more than 10+ bookmarks. Once they released the visual interface I switched everything over to Papaly and haven't looked back. They're everything that Google bookmarks wasn't and extremely easy to organize all my 100+ designer resources with ease.
Link to their Chrome Extension: https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/new-tab-bookmark-speed-di/pdcohkhhjbifkmpakaiopnllnddofbbn
For me it wasn't that I couldn't find a place, it was that when I did I was #25 in line. So yeah, hope this helps! This sounds crazy, but I'm sure you're at the point to try anything so here's what I did to get #1 in line for our current place.
Go to https://visualping.io/ and set up website crawlers on every property management site you can find - do this for their "vacancies" pages. It will notify you if the website has been updated and you can set it to check however often you want. I set this up on like 15 PM company sites and had it check every hour during business hours and within two weeks I got a place. It'll cost some money, but spending the $25 was worth getting a place to live
I believe in replacing the addiction with something that's worth being addicted to.
So 1st order: clean up your reddit. Just unsubscribe from all the junk subreddits and only subscribe to ones that seem "worth it." It's not like you won't be able to find all of those low quality subreddits or meme pages if you need them - there's no reason to be subscribed.
2nd order: replace reddit with other better activities. For me this is podcasts. I almost never listen to a podcast that I don't think is "worth it" (again, as in cleaning up your reddit, you have to actively stop listening to things that you think are low quality). Podcasts fulfill your criteria of "on the train, it's on the plane, it runs on a computer from 1995, it's at the gym."
Another option is to get an app for reading blogs and choose blogs over reddit (almost always higher quality). I use the old reader.
Aside, I don't think this:
>When you're tired and bored, there's not much you can do that's productive.
is true. This is generally when I do admin, do the dishes, do errands, or as someone said, sleep. Basically, anything that doesn't require my brain to be awake gets put in this slot. This is also a good time for meditation.
I've been using Tiny Tiny RSS for half a year now and it's great. Add feedly.css as a theme and you get very modern-looking, responsive in-browser RSS feed that can also talk with regular desktop clients like Liferea or Thunderbird. There is also Android client. It rocks, hands down.
It says very clearly in their terms of service they are collecting your browser's cookies, pixels tags and other meta data to better serve you relevant content. https://feedly.com/i/legal/privacy If they are collecting that data without permission though (you haven't allowed access to that data for the app) that's another story.
Took them only 5+ months to actually listen to their users. Never looked back after using Papaly as my bookmark manager. Hands down better than their Google Bookmarker and not to mention won't get dropped like most of Google products.
Reddit is great for the community and content, however, if you're just looking for content then a RSS reader will do. For example, I run Tiny Tiny RSS that runs on one of my servers so it can be accessed any where. (instead of local). Also use the Android app for it.
When Google Reader was being shutdown TTS was suggested as a personal replacement by some, though I didn't really use google reader so can't compare. You can also hook TTS up to other TTSes apparently so they all share content, but I haven't looked at that. Only problem is that you have to find the sites that have the content you want and they have to have RSS (but what site doesn't?). And then the wading through of articles that you don't care about to find that one, but just scroll through the list like you do with your email from the bosses, and you'll be fine. ;)
Mozilla Thunderbird (portable) - email client (multiple accounts, gmail support, spell checker, tabs, quick filter, master password protection, add-ons, themes, dark mode...)
Just check the website..
If you REALLY want to know the moment the update drops then there are many ways to track if a webpage/site has changes (which hopefully means there is an update) e.g. Visualping
Mostly for TT-RSS which is an RSS aggregator. I use it so I can have one place for all of my news. I have about 150-200 feeds in there. (Neat thing that you might not be aware of is that reddit generates rss/atom feeds for every subreddit, this one is here -- just add .rss to the end of the url)
It's a pretty cool little program honestly, but it can be rough on the database. MySQL is using pretty much all of the RAM on my server right now (it only has 16GB due to the 3rd memory channel being down) but with some massaging MySQL can be pretty fast.
I use The Old Reader which is free but there are lots of options - https://theoldreader.com/. RSS is basically a way to very neatly read all the updates to sites you read in one space. So I have a few news organizations I like that I pop in there + some of my favorite blogs and then it’s just one spot where I check up on everything. I find it less overwhelming and it’s nice to not have to navigate a million sites haha.
I like Tiny Tiny RSS a lot with plugins like feediron you get directly full content into your feed e.g. comic strips. I tested freshrss and miniflux but didnt like them.
Hi,
So this used to be a problem before and I "solved it" by reducing the Number of requests
in <strong>QuiteRSS</strong> down to 2
.
But considering I had 1000s of channels that I keep track of, it became painfully slow. But it did "solve" the problem. So I stuck with it.
But now not even than works.
I have not yet tried reducing it to 1
since I'm trying to measure the cooldown time until YouTube resets the IP bot ban.
Basically I feel like YouTube seems to be slowly killing RSS(accidentally maybe?) and I'm seriously losing my mind since RSS is the only surefire way I know of, to "subscribe" to and keep track of channels I truly care about.
I know alternatives like Invidious RSS exists. But they're often unreliable when the instance goes down and I have to manually change the feeds for 1000s of channels in my QuiteRSS reader.
Please help me with any alternatives and confirm if you're also experiencing the same issue.
With extreme fear and concern,
Thanks.
Hol dir feedly (oder andere RSS Reader) und füttere es mit RSS feeds deiner Wahl. Sei es FAZ, SZ, Deutschlandfunk, die Welt, Heise, Handelsblatt, ntv, SPON, tagesschau, taz, Zeit online, etc.
Thunderbird 60 is just around the corner and will bring a Quantum-inspired UI (mainly square tabs and modern icons) besides many improvements: https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/thunderbird/60.0beta/releasenotes/
I'm very happy to see this revived effort put into my favourite mail client!
Pro tip: use a service like Visual Ping to monitor product pages for when they’re restocked.
In this case, I setup an alert for when the page removed the text “OUT OF STOCK” and was notified with enough time to place an order.
I’ve been monitoring their stock for a while. It’s been re-stocked a few times now so I’m guessing they’ve got some more in production.
https://visualping.io if you want to get notified when their stock/website changes
I love Feedbin and it's open source. Been using it for a while now and as a big RSS user I think it does a great job.
>When Google got out of the RSS game, those of us who remained realized that yes, we can survive without them. Five years later, RSS is still the best, most unfiltered way to get content you want. There’s a greater diversity of choices and no one company dominates everything. So let’s stop hoping Facebook or Twitter or someone else will do our job for us. Let’s stop waiting for someone to tell us what we want to read. Let’s stop publishing what they want us to publish. We can do better without them.
Personally I use Feedbin :)
Depois da queda do Google Reader, tenho usado até hoje uma instalação local do Tiny Tiny RSS, num servidorzinho que fica ligado 24/7.
Foi a experiência mais próxima que encontrei em relação ao Reader.
EDIT: outras thread que já havia sido criada: https://www.reddit.com/r/brasil/comments/88vk3t/its_time_for_an_rss_revival/
You're not alone. Google Reader was my best friend. Instead of opening it up to the community they shut it down, Very Sad Day. Then they started messing with the XMPP server and thats when I "snapped"; Ive never seen Google the same since.
Ive tried my best to either decentralize my services or host them myself.
I've been running an instance of Tiny Tiny Rss to replace my reader. I would highly recommend it to you.
Edit: Trusting any 3rd party central server is probably a mistake, as you have no sovereignty. Tricking users to surrender data sovereignty is being pushed hard, specifically through service-level agreements. I know Microsoft has been getting a lot of praise lately, but re-defining malware and taking from the open source communities should not be an honorable moral.
Össze tudsz állítani magadnak hírcsatornákat hírforrásokból. Pl napi hírek, sport, tudományos, stb...
Van ennek fizetős verziója is, ahol egy mesterséges intelligencia szelektálja a különböző forrásokból érkező, de azonos híreket és csak az egyiket tartja meg.
​
Az ingyenes verziónál a az elmúlt napon legtöbbet olvasott 3 cikket emeli ki a folyamodból. Szóval ha reggel meg este ránézel, akkor kb. lefedi a legfontosabbakat.
To stay on top of German public holidays, you can subscribe to this webcalendar.
For Allerheiligen it says: "Christlicher Feiertag. Nur in Baden-Württemberg, Bayern, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Rheinland-Pfalz und Saarland."
I switched from Google Bookmarks over to Papaly ever since they went downhill with their interface. Hands down the best bookmarking managers that I've tried out. If you're like me and on the computer a lot it will save you a lot of time.
Bookmark Manager Chrome Extension: https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/new-tab-bookmark-speed-di/pdcohkhhjbifkmpakaiopnllnddofbbn?en
I find that the space this is growing in is on the Web, as a monthly or yearly service. I go with Inoreader, as they seem to be actively seeking to innovate and come up with new ideas in the space. They also are in the midst of an annual Black Friday deal that is the best deal of the year.
All of the above sounds very boosterish, but that link is not an affiliate one, and I honestly mean my recommendation in response to your question.
I used visual ping to get the notification that drunkenslug was open for registration. You tell it to look a website once a day and if there are any changes like to the registration page like it may say closed today but tomorrow if it's open and the form is there it will notify you that something is changed
Thats what i did because i dont check this subreddit often to know when things are open so it was useful for that one time i used it
Depends on how you like to read them. You can set up Tiny Tiny RSS as a web-based RSS reader (even if you only serve locally). You can use newsboat
if you like to read them from the CLI (which also has tt-rss
integrations).
I personally run rss2email
from a cron
job so that my RSS feeds get sent to my email. I don't need to learn a new UI (and I have all the filtering power of my MUA to auto-delete ones I know I don't want), I can forward them to share, I can control polling frequency, it stays in sync across machines thanks to IMAP, works offline thanks to offlineimap/mbsync, can be easily searched with notmuch
, etc.
J'ai une instance de Tiny Tiny RSS https://tt-rss.org/ que je regarde sur un navigateur ou depuis mes téléphones (Android, iOS). Ca me convient. Pas de maintenance à faire ce qui est un point important pour moi.
Here's what I've got in my Feedly currently: https://imgur.com/a/w5TrhwJ
I really recommend feedly, it's basically what Google Reader used to be, so just a good online RSS reader.
Sortiere Quellen, auch Quellen die eher im rechten oder linken Spektrum liegen + einige Englische, mit Feedly (kostenloser Version, obwohl in Zukunft könnte ich mir auch vorstellen Premium zu holen) und log mich da 2-3 mal täglich ein um mir halt einen Überblick zu verschaffen was die Menschen so bewegt.
Außerdem bin ich durch r/de auch aufmerksam geworden auf https://www.bpb.de/shop/ und hole mir dort ab und zu Bücher (sind ja sehr günstig für die Qualität, oftmals bei 4,50) um die größeren langfristigeren Zusammenhänge zu verstehen.
Edit: Siehe olandandgreat's Kommentar, Zeit nutzen um wichtigeres anzuvisieren und "um Bücher zu lesen, um Nachrichten auch richtig einordnen und bewerten zu können" dafür ist bpb.de/shop wirklich toll, natürlich nicht die einzige Quelle um tolle Bücher übers politische Weltgeschehen zu finden, aber doch eine die meiner Meinung nach sehr Erwähnenswert ist.
You can also just use any rss reader (feedly is a popular choice) to subscribe to the Game Release Notes forum section.
This doesn't require you to use another service (assuming you already use a rss reader), it doesn't require a third party to get the facts right, and judging by this line from their faq
> We try to be as fast as possible. You can expect that your daily email notification will include all releases of your followed applications from the previous day.
, the rss feed will be way faster.
It's an interesting service but I just don't see the point, especially for this game where we already have the release notes easily accessible on the forums, via rss, on reddit, and in the wiki.
Try clearing cache:
Press Ctrl-Shift-Delete (Mac: Cmd-Shift-Delete) Set 'Time range...' to 'Everything' Untick all items except 'Cache' Clear, then restart FF
If that fails, try disabling all addons.
If that fails, see if it misbehaves in Troubleshooting mode (TB menu > Help > Restart...).
If all fail, reinstall from https://www.thunderbird.net/
If that fails, un-reinstall. Un/reinstall should keep your profile (data).
If that fails, create a new profile (https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/profile-manager-create-and-remove-thunderbird-profiles?redirectslug=profile-manager-create-and-remove-thunderbird-prof&redirectlocale=en-US).
I use Thunderbird It will download all your emails from a number of different email clients and you can then decide which emails you want to store on your computer. I now have my Yahoo email accounts on there and will be adding my GMail account. You can also email or delete from the program. I have not explored everything that it can do, but since Yahoo took away groups, I've been worried about losing all my Yahoo emails too.
The Thunderbird foundation and mzla technologies has a handful of people working on it. The work is largely funded by donations. They currently have 3 job postings open.
https://papaly.com - There is a Chrome and new FF extension for it that makes bookmarking very easy.
Edit: There is also an iOS extension but I don't know anything about that one.
Edit: Edit: There is also a Papaly sub that is pretty bare so far. https://www.reddit.com/r/Papaly
I'm always amazed when people don't know about this, considering their disclosure policy is posted on every article. It's a great way to see who has 'skin in the game'. If anyone wants to set up a project where we gather all of these stocks and weight them by their CAPs ranking, I wouldn't mind contributing. It's definitely a big task though
PRO TIP: You can use visualping.io to get a notification when their holdings change by setting up an alert when the stock section of their profile page changes. I started doing this with TMFJoey but it seemed like he traded a bit too frequently for my taste.
A1up said orders will be available when the cabinets hit land from overseas and that should be around late Jan., early Feb.
I use https://visualping.io/ to have it email me when the website changes and orders go live. If you use the free checks they give you, just set the pings to something like checking 2-3 times a day or you will run out quick of the free checks if you do every hour.
Rogue fitness has random restocks - your best bet is checking here periodically: https://www.roguefitness.com/black-concept-2-model-d-rower-pm5 if no one has a link to share.
I picked up one from there today instead of sitting on the waiting list - it was in stock for 4 hours today.
You can use this site to set up an in stock notification: https://visualping.io
The website is up, but as it says in the CR announcement the login functionality is disabled until further notice.
If you want to keep checking it daily for changes you are best off using a bot to do it for you eg https://visualping.io
No idea about when its coming back but thank you for the link-- this looks like a nice resume add.
I'd recommend you try out visualping-- they'll email you if the page changes.
That's a good start then! I'll try my best to keep my eyes peeled on that TV for you. I would recommend a page monitor so that it dings you when the page updates. A good one is VisualPing (I recommend getting their Chrome extension). You can select the area you want to monitor so you can just monitor the area of the price, etc...
Good luck!
I use The Old Reader. They started up when Google Reader was removing some social features, and so it has a really similar look and feel to what Google Reader used to. It was a really popular one for people to turn to when Reader shut down.
It's not really in the same category, but I like Tiny Tiny RSS. It actually runs on a server, but there's an Android client for it. For me, the benefits of having a central location for my feeds keep me happily using tt-rss in place of basically anything else.
Tiny Tiny RSS since google took Reader away.
I have an instance on a DigitalOcean VM that I run some other web services on, and I consume pretty much all my internet through it. Easy to set up and maintain, keeps track of what I've looked at across machines/platforms, nice web interface, nice Android app, etc .
unless you need extended metadata support, i don't think there's any point in using calibre server in this scenario.
shameless plug what you should be using is this https://tt-rss.org/gitlab/fox/the-epube
If you're technically inclined, or know someone who is, there's always Tiny Tiny RSS -- an open source RSS aggregator web app. I spun up a digital ocean droplet and run my own instance. It's great, since now I'm the only one that gets to know exactly what my tastes in news/culture sources are (runs fine on the smallest linux droplet, for $5 a month).
I used Liferea for a while after Google Reader tanked, but for some reason, it would occasionally disorganize the database (wrong entries for wrong subscriptions). This may be fixed now, I don't know. What I've been using instead is TinyTinyRSS. For someone who lived on Google Reader, this works pretty well. https://tt-rss.org/gitlab/fox/tt-rss/wikis/home
Con Inoreader puoi arrrivare ai 150, e ti consente cartelle infinite. Certo non hai la libertà di mettere ciò che vuoi ma sempre meglio di Feedly in questo senso.
P.S. come fai a seguire tutti quei feed? Io tutte le volte che ci provo mi viene l'ansia di leggerli tutti lol. Preferisco quacosa che faccia scorrere le notizie aldilà che io legga o meno, tipo Twitter, o magari Start.me per gli Rss
Το indymedia το έχω κι εγώ, απλώς σε διαφορετικό φάκελο, για αυτό δεν μπήκε σε αυτά. Θα δω μήπως το προσθέσω κι εδώ :).
Όσον αφορά τον reader, τσέκαρε και τον Inoreader. Έχει πολύ πιο πλούσια χαρακτηριστικά από το Feedly. Από κανόνες, γρήγορε ενεργές αναζητήσεις, φίλτρα και ετικέτες μέχρι συνδρομή σε ροές Twitter, Facebook και Google Plus.
Έχεις κάτι από γεωπολιτικά να μου προτείνεις;
Personally I use https://feedly.com/. It's useful for organizing all my sources and browsing them all efficiently in a single interface. I follow blogs, youtube channels, subreddits, online magazines, journals etc.
(And no, I don't work for them :P )
RSS stands for "Rich Site Summary".
Having an RSS feed from a website is like subscribing to the 'new' section of a subreddit. It gives you a copy of the newest things a website publishes, such as an article on a news site or a blog.
You can get apps which hold all your RSS feeds for you (called RSS Readers). These work kind of like the front page of Reddit, except for any website you want.
They save you time by allowing you to look at all the things on the web you're interested in on a single page, rather than having to visit lots of websites, and you don't have to check to see if anything new has been posted on those sites. Some readers also allow you to organise websites you follow or search through your feed for specific things.
If you're looking for a good, easy to use reader, I'd suggest Feedly. Looks nice and has a free option.
Source here
Hope this helped :)
It would probably take an old style news group reader where you would have to download all the headers first.
I believe Thunderbird can be configured to read usenet posts. Add in the ImportExportTools and export the posts.
I haven't tried this, so no guarantee that it would work.
Forte Agent also has an option to export messages, File menu->Save Messages As...
Thunderbird - Address book (check all tabs), it's available for Windows, Lunux, Mac OS.
MyPhoneExplorer - with this program it's possible to synchronize contacts on Android with Thunderbird (I'm just not sure if it's all items, probably not, so it's recommended to use data from PC/Thunderbird).
<strong>Mozilla Thunderbird</strong> (portable) - (with Automatic Dictionary, MyPhoneExplorer) email client (multiple accounts, gmail support, spell checker, tabs, quick filter, master password protection, add-ons, themes, dark mode...)
<strong>MyPhoneExplorer</strong> - Android smartphone sync software (intuitive, easy to use, many features, 1-click sync all, backup, portable mode...)
Both programs are free.
Any reason why you downloaded 32-bit version? From ldd
output, no library is missing. But at same time, it doesn't list gtk3
library so it is probably loaded explicitly by program and it is probably looking for 32-bin version.
Note that Thunderbird-52.9.1 can be installed with # apt-get install thunderbird
.
You can download 64-bit version here: https://www.thunderbird.net/en-US/. 64-bit version worked on my station (Debian stable).
It bothers me more that people even use the (hopelessly incomplete and buggy) Maill app at all.
Just yesterday I had someone ask me why there are no attachments showing in some emails, while they do show in the webmail. Well, because the Mail app is shit! That's why!
Either cough up the money to use Outlook, or download Thunderbird.
Asking for api and having custom service check and alert would be a professional solution, but if it is not possible, you could try how well would service like https://visualping.io/ work for you. I did not use it, just first Google result for site changes monitoring. I remember I used something like this a few years back when I needed to know quickly when a certain blog post was updated.
> Browser checks (Free forever)
>
> Your computer monitors the page.
So it might get you rate-limited and probably have to solve a Captcha.
> Server checks (2 daily checks free)
Which is pretty pointless if you want an alert in less than 6 hours (on average).
~~Appts are available in Des Moines right now~~. If you miss this round, try setting up a scraper with visualping.io, its not super straightforward but I had it checking every 15 minutes since 8AM and just got a notification spots were open. Bonus its the J&J one-shot.
This Detect availability thing seems like such nonsense coming from a company the size of Google.
It's like their inventory system is telling them they have 3 pallets of these things in a warehouse in Asia somewhere, and once they find them, they will sell them and then finally admit that they are discontinued forever.
As for monitoring that stupid page so that you might get lucky and get one of the last ever Detects, I recommend something like https://visualping.io/.
I just finished my second workout on the rower! It’s awesome! I set up a visual ping through here for free: https://visualping.io/ I set it for hourly and within 3 days I had a hit for it to notify it had restocked and I ordered it. This lets you know before the website gets a chance to tell you it’s been restocked. In fact, I didn’t even get an email notification to say it was back in stock. It sold out within a couple hours.
No problem!
I was there the morning of the 3950X launch and was able to snag one, but it was still a bit crazy. I ended up refreshing a few sites and got lucky - there are even some sites you can use which effectively monitor pages for changes to help notify you if something goes "live." Visual Ping is a good one.
One last note to clarify although it was probably obvious... when I say to check on November 5th in that time window, I technically mean 11PM on November 4th to 1AM November 5th, just as the day ticks over. :P
Good luck, it should be a beast of a CPU!
You might get some milage out of this. Has a free tier to try, but you will have to pay for your volume and frequency. not my tool either so I can't do support for ya, but good luck!
Hey u/colaforth, I'm not sure whether you can do this with IFTTT, however, there is a tool called https://visualping.io/ which you can use to get the e-mail alert if there is any change.
If you need a notification, there is an applet available. Hope this is helpful.
The website is up, but as it says in the CR announcement the login functionality is disabled until further notice.
If you want to keep checking it daily for changes you are best off using a bot to do it for you eg https://visualping.io
If you search Google for monitor website changes you'll find lots of sites that can do this for you. This one is the first result, for example. I've never used it, nor any of the others, so I can't vouch for it but it's an option you can try.
> Why not? Its quite simple to do, Just check your competitors website and adjust your price accordingly if possible.
There is a tool for that. It will tell you when a website is updated and notify you of the changes.
I have used Visualping before, it lets you know if there are any changes to a webpage, like a survey being added. Haven't used it in a while, but it was very useful back when I was doing surveys. I downloaded it as a Chrome extension https://visualping.io/
Fair enough, I dunno what the landscape looks like for you guys in our northern mexico but I'm a big fan of refurbs if you can find a good deal. Extended warranties taken over a lifetime are a waste of money but if it means peace of mind to buy refurbished and save a few hundred bucks you could always get a squaretrade or similar extended warranty for ~$150 for 2 years. It depends on how valuable your time is, if saving a few hundred bucks is worth waiting a few weeks for a deal I'd say you download https://visualping.io/ or distill web monitor and set up alerts for the X34 on acers recert website or set up IFTTT.com alerts to send you an email when X34 is posted here, this is the trigger I used: title:'PG279Q' title:'XB271HU' title:'X34' subreddit:hardwareswap
Para RSS self-hosted, uso o miniflux
Já experimentei o tinyrss e o leitor de rss do nextcloud, mas o miniflux é, para mim, exactamente o que procuro: minimalista, funciona bem em qualquer browser (ue tenha experimentado) e PWA.
I used tiny-tiny-rss for a long time, but after setting up my server with docker-compose, I switched to miniflux. It does not have an app as good as ttrss but you can start the webapp as an app. It does lack offline use, perhaps they add it sometime.
Really Simple Syndication. It’s what most publications used before FB/IG/Twitter got popular. Most standard blogging software (like WordPress) supports it. I use https://theoldreader.com/ to subscribe and keep track of blogs I like. :)
The Old Reader is a re-implementation of the sadly defunct Google Reader, allowing you to follow any site that has an RSS or Atom feed - most blogs do. In the case of /u/Gundobad_Games blog, in the sidebar where it says "Subscribe To", you can dropdown the "Posts" menu and there's an "Atom" option; you copy and paste that link into the Old Reader.
Learn to look for the RSS icon (that orange square with the three white quarter-circles) and you'll find you can follow quite a lot of blogs that way.
There are other RSS readers as well, as standalone desktop or mobile apps, or as web apps in your browser like the Old Reader.
https://feedbin.com/blog/2018/01/11/feedbin-is-the-best-way-to-read-twitter/
I'm happy with what Feedbin does. I've also used RSS Bridge with Tiny Tiny RSS.
This is that thing.
Many of the good RSS apps on Android are tied to a service. Feedly, Inoreader, etc. Many of the apps that could be used with independent services just die on Android.
If you want to not pay (which is a legitimate thing... no hate here) you can self-host an RSS service, but even then, you need an app, or a service with a web interface that won't break your phone.
I use Feedbin. I don't mind paying. I'd rather not mess around, and I want to use RSS on multiple devices and operating systems. It's simple UI and powerful filters get it done for me, even when I'm on Android.
https://feedbin.com/apps?filter=android
​
iOS tends to be a bigger UI playground.
I think feedbin had a public discussion about their implementation of an image proxy... and I believe source code is available. Maybe a review of the specifics would indicate their expectation.
Not that I am aware. If you need sync, something like Feedly is the way to go.
You should keep something in mind, though: services like this cost money to run. If most users don't pay, eventually ads, data mining, sponsored content, etc, will be used to find revenue. You can find a better alternative, but if most of their users use a free plan, then it's only a matter of time until they do something similar.
If it's not practical to use only one device to read the content (would remove the need for sync), other than a service, the only solution I could think of is to host your own RSS reader server... not an option for most people, but Tiny Tiny RSS ( https://tt-rss.org/ ) should work fine on a cheap raspberry pi.
> I love F-Droid
Both apps are on the Play Store too, btw.
It wasn't easy to find (because using open standards doesn't help Google or Apple get their claws deeper into you), but there is an RSS feed. I just added it to my TT-RSS list and it works great. Support open standards and use the client of your choice!
Soapbox aside, I'm sorry I haven't looked at this before. Bob Odenkirk? I gotta listen to that. Nice guest list.
Okay - I don't have my RPi available atm, but I do have an Orange Pi Zero running Armbian that I just installed nginx and ttrss on.
Process:
sudo apt install nginx
less /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/default
- to check out the configuration.
sudo git clone https://tt-rss.org/git/tt-rss.git /var/www/html/ttrss
sudo chown -R www-data:www-data /var/www/html/ttrss
sudo chmod -R 777 /var/www/html/ttrss
echo '<h1> TEST </h1>' > /var/www/html/ttrss/index.html
- create a test file, go to <address>/ttrss/ and see if nginx works. It did.
sudo apt install php
sudo nano /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/default
- and edit to enable index.php and php fpm.sock
sudo systemctl restart nginx
Browse to <address>/ttrss/install/ and there's the "Tiny Tiny RSS Installer" page.
Non ho aperto QuiteRSS per 1 settimana e mi accorgo di una crisi di governo.
Ma in italia siamo mai arrivati a 5 anni di mandato? A sto punto conviene cambiare la costituzione e mettere 1 anno ^(/s)
Ich bin altmodisch und nutze ein Desktop-Programm: QuiteRSS!
Ursprünglich habe ich FeedReader genutzt, aber der ist...nicht ganz so gut.
Meine Lieblingsfeeds die ich (je nach Interesse an Tech/Gaming) empfehle:
> This one ? https://quiterss.org/
Thanks! I think this one will do! (Edit: seems very crashy though, at least on GNU. Will keep it for now but more suggestions welcome)
> Also, this http://www.rssowl.org/
I ruled out Java-based ones, because they require the additional step of install JRE, and for Windows users that's going to be Oracle's implementation and not OpenJDK. I didn't want to encourage the installation of any other nonfree program other that what they are already using (Windows or OS X).
Have you tried the automated RSS feed creators or even made your own scrapers?
Something like https://www.inoreader.com/blog/2020/04/convert-almost-any-webpage-into-rss-feed-with-inoreaders-web-feeds.html for example, this is the service I jumped into after testing out everything that was available at the time of Google Reader phasing out.
Inoreader
PS The icons are visible to everyone - the "sort by magic΅ unfortunately requires the pro plan.
Suosittelen RSS-syötelukijapalvelua Inoreader. Tämänkin postauksen luin ensin syötteestä ja tulin katsomaan mitä on kommentoitu. Ilmaiseksi saa käyttää max 150 lähdettä, mutta jo kannatuksen vuoksi 50€ per vuosi Pro-versiosta ei ole paha, eihän? Myös Twitterit/FB ja sähköpostilistat saa tilattua ja keskitettyä sinne.
ja bloginsa