There's a chain near me that makes a breakfast sandwich with eggs, bacon, white cheddar, a really excellent garlic aioli, and Ciabatta bread.
I go there way too much.
There's a chain near me that makes a breakfast sandwich with eggs, bacon, white cheddar, a really excellent garlic aioli, and Ciabatta bread.
I go there way too much.
Fringe is great. Season 1 is a bit "Monster of the week" but when it gets going it's a great ride.
I hung up a maple 1x6.
The left side has an attached ruler with both metric and ft/in.
The right side has large vinyl numbers for feet (mainly just to look nice).
In between the heights are marked with multicolored Sharpies indicating who is measured and the month/year.
If you haven't seen it, Ex Machina (2014) fits the vibe of your list. It's one of my favorites.
The Punt for Red October
(Assuming American Football)
It has my favorite user interface, but I feel that it bogs down after viewing a series of images. ~~I also feel that development has stalled a bit~~ (edit, I was mistaken: they just released a pre release).
I haven't found a better one, though. Next best so far has been Racoon.
I wonder if they are preparing to stop using it. That could be a benign reason for the change in wording.
This doesn't exactly match your goals, but you may be able to adapt it or take pieces from it.
I have containers running on two subnets:
Subnet 1 has a DNS server, which resolves all of my services to IPs on either subnet.
I have Tailscale set up on a machine as a subnet router (directing to Subnet 1).
Result:
This is nice because my apps don't care which network I'm on, they just use the same URL to connect. And the sensitive stuff (usually management tools) are not accessible remotely.
It's also ridiculously simple: Only one Tailscale service is running at home.
This does not solve your issue of broadcasting vs not broadcasting, though. There's probably other things missing as well. But maybe it's a start?
the AI that wrote the article
The linked article is by Dan Goodin from Ars Technica. He's not immune to mistakes, but he's been writing good articles about security for years.
Can we please not accuse everybody of being AI just because they made a mistake?
I do this as well, but I use Libation: https://github.com/rmcrackan/Libation
Super easy, barely an inconvenience.
Then I use Audiobookshelf https://www.audiobookshelf.org/ to host the books and their Android app to play them.
Logseq has an Android app and clients for the usual desktop platforms. It stores as .md files. It meets your requirements. I'm not sure why you're focused on Firefox support?
One I have my eye on is Silverbullet.md. the creator recently promoted it here and it has some nice ideas. It's a web app that you self host. Behind the scenes everything is stored in .md files.
Maybe unpopular opinion here, but I just read The Three Musketeers, and it's not even close to The Count of Monte Cristo.
The characters wildly change in tone and basic morals, the heroes are dirtbags, and the plot wanders.
I still enjoyed it, but it just wasn't the same.