Colored leaves in front of dark sky
ugh. i miss the low humidity of az. normal run to check out milton damage. huge trees blocking the pinellas trail.
#running
ugh. i miss the low humidity of az. normal run to check out milton damage. huge trees blocking the pinellas trail.
#running
ugh. i miss the low humidity of az. normal run to check out milton damage. huge trees blocking the pinellas trail.
#running
https://ciberlandia.pt/@PureDeNoticias/113299764172870224
https://ciberlandia.pt/@PureDeNoticias/113299764172870224
- KickAss 12V/24V 25A DCDC Charger With Solar MPPT + Pre-Wired Anderson
- iTECHDCDC25 12V/24V 25A DCDC & MPPT Battery Charger
- Renogy DCC30S 12V 30A Dual Input DC to DC Battery Charger with MPPT
The only advantage of the Renogy over the KickAss/ITech models is it has Bluetooth monitoring and an App capabilities so you can check the state of the battery/charging/etc from your phone.
- KickAss 12V/24V 25A DCDC Charger With Solar MPPT + Pre-Wired Anderson
- iTECHDCDC25 12V/24V 25A DCDC & MPPT Battery Charger
- Renogy DCC30S 12V 30A Dual Input DC to DC Battery Charger with MPPT
The only advantage of the Renogy over the KickAss/ITech models is it has Bluetooth monitoring and an App capabilities so you can check the state of the battery/charging/etc from your phone.
twtxt.net) so welcome 🤗 (_if you see this_)
twtxt.net) so welcome 🤗 (_if you see this_)
twtxt.net) so welcome 🤗 (_if you see this_)
Site do The Spectator com um artigo do Slavoj Zizek intitulado "Why am I popular on TikTok?"
Site do The Spectator com um artigo do Slavoj Zizek intitulado "Why am I popular on TikTok?"
A mi me da pena por la cabra. 🌩️ ⌘ Read more****
¡Mejora esto Ayuso! ⌘ Read more****
At first, I thought that Antenna acted like a “traditional” blog aggregator, but that’s not really the case. You know, with a blog aggregator, you would normally contact the owner and ask them to include your feed. That step is not needed with Antenna.
So, when someone publishes a blog/gemlog post and you would like to “reply” to it, you can just do that: Write your post and then publish the link on Antenna. This means your Gemini capsule doesn’t need to be well known in order to participate. If I read something interesting and would like to reply, I could do that *right now* – instead of having to wait for the webmaster of the aggregator to include/unlock my feed.
Also, it’s just arbitrary Gemini links in Antenna – unlike a blog aggregator, where everything is a blog post. So I just saw someone publishing a link titled “A wild twtxt appears” and that’s just a link to their twtxt file.
In many ways, this thing is a bit more like a forum than a blog aggregator. Or maybe you could also call it a “bus”.
At first, I thought that Antenna acted like a “traditional” blog aggregator, but that’s not really the case. You know, with a blog aggregator, you would normally contact the owner and ask them to include your feed. That step is not needed with Antenna.
So, when someone publishes a blog/gemlog post and you would like to “reply” to it, you can just do that: Write your post and then publish the link on Antenna. This means your Gemini capsule doesn’t need to be well known in order to participate. If I read something interesting and would like to reply, I could do that *right now* – instead of having to wait for the webmaster of the aggregator to include/unlock my feed.
Also, it’s just arbitrary Gemini links in Antenna – unlike a blog aggregator, where everything is a blog post. So I just saw someone publishing a link titled “A wild twtxt appears” and that’s just a link to their twtxt file.
In many ways, this thing is a bit more like a forum than a blog aggregator. Or maybe you could also call it a “bus”.
At first, I thought that Antenna acted like a “traditional” blog aggregator, but that’s not really the case. You know, with a blog aggregator, you would normally contact the owner and ask them to include your feed. That step is not needed with Antenna.
So, when someone publishes a blog/gemlog post and you would like to “reply” to it, you can just do that: Write your post and then publish the link on Antenna. This means your Gemini capsule doesn’t need to be well known in order to participate. If I read something interesting and would like to reply, I could do that *right now* – instead of having to wait for the webmaster of the aggregator to include/unlock my feed.
Also, it’s just arbitrary Gemini links in Antenna – unlike a blog aggregator, where everything is a blog post. So I just saw someone publishing a link titled “A wild twtxt appears” and that’s just a link to their twtxt file.
In many ways, this thing is a bit more like a forum than a blog aggregator. Or maybe you could also call it a “bus”.
At first, I thought that Antenna acted like a “traditional” blog aggregator, but that’s not really the case. You know, with a blog aggregator, you would normally contact the owner and ask them to include your feed. That step is not needed with Antenna.
So, when someone publishes a blog/gemlog post and you would like to “reply” to it, you can just do that: Write your post and then publish the link on Antenna. This means your Gemini capsule doesn’t need to be well known in order to participate. If I read something interesting and would like to reply, I could do that *right now* – instead of having to wait for the webmaster of the aggregator to include/unlock my feed.
Also, it’s just arbitrary Gemini links in Antenna – unlike a blog aggregator, where everything is a blog post. So I just saw someone publishing a link titled “A wild twtxt appears” and that’s just a link to their twtxt file.
In many ways, this thing is a bit more like a forum than a blog aggregator. Or maybe you could also call it a “bus”.
Me estaba comiendo una sopa y ¡zas!, ahí estaba, Rafa Nadal. ⌘ Read more****
utf-8 period. Just assume it to be true, there is no other content encoding we should ever support 😅
utf-8 period. Just assume it to be true, there is no other content encoding we should ever support 😅
(When the spec says “content is UTF-8”, then it kind of follows for me that I should set
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8. Lots of feeds don’t do that, though, which is why jenny ignores the header altogether and always decodes as UTF-8.)
(When the spec says “content is UTF-8”, then it kind of follows for me that I should set
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8. Lots of feeds don’t do that, though, which is why jenny ignores the header altogether and always decodes as UTF-8.)
(When the spec says “content is UTF-8”, then it kind of follows for me that I should set
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8. Lots of feeds don’t do that, though, which is why jenny ignores the header altogether and always decodes as UTF-8.)
(When the spec says “content is UTF-8”, then it kind of follows for me that I should set
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8. Lots of feeds don’t do that, though, which is why jenny ignores the header altogether and always decodes as UTF-8.)
saltyd 😅
saltyd 😅