







Most visual novels should suffice if you like those. VA-11 Hall-A is great (though best if can hold a drink in the other hand)
Oh, and point-and-click adventure are usually also controllable with just a mouse.


Not online though, but a really awesome typing game!


I think I can create a CNAME record for *.media to point to the Tailscale address of the reverse proxy
This approach, but if you setup your server to advertise subnets you can use your local IP range instead of tailscale’s. Port numbers for individual services would be handled by your reverse proxy, you can setup a subdomain route for each service.
Instead of having to keep track of bookmarks you can use something like homepage on the root of your domain, as a dashboard to navigate to all other services.
AW Shit not again


My setup just has the local IP (of the reverse proxy) in the domain’s DNS records, and I have Tailscale on my home server setup to advertise subnet routes, so I can use the same local IP when at home or remote via Tailscale. No need to use your public IP or open ports or anything.
Vikunja is great. You can self-host it or use their hosting plan. It has different views (Kanban, List, Table and Gantt).


Funny how that title states the opposite of that of the original article:
More Articles Are Now Created by AI Than Humans
https://graphite.io/five-percent/more-articles-are-now-created-by-ai-than-humans


Still looking at an external backup solution like Backblaze or Hetzner
Agreed, actually most of Studio Trigger’s works :)
Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann
The bsky link goes to a different artwork of the same artist, the original post for image can be found here: https://bsky.app/profile/arthur.baron-clement.com/post/3lw2vgtuck225
I use SourceGit as a Fork alternative on Linux, it’s pretty similar
Fork on windows, SourceGit on Linux, both have a similar UI layout to SourceTree, but are much faster/snappier.
I really like having a clear overview of the commit history, branches and current local state. I haven’t figured out yet how to get such an “at a glance” overview in the CLI.
For advanced stuff the CLI is still very convenient.


There are some linux distros specifically for older/low-end hardware:
Of that list I tried Q4OS on an EEE pc. It worked ok, but mainly modern websites are just way too heavy and unoptimized.
I interpreted them to be Willow Catkins, not cotton balls. Not sure which the artist intended.
Edit: they are indeed supposed to be Willow Catkins, no no kitty harm here :)


Totally worth it even in SDR, the pure blacks are so much better than any other form of backlighting, and even without HDR the colors are much more vibrant.


Ah you mean where the image link is formatted like ![[foo.png]]. I tried some things but it seems Obsidian doesn’t support nesting those inside a link (eg [![[foo.png]]](example.com) is not accepted as valid formatting).