I just noticed that W3C validator now wants me to confirm that I'm a human… That's a sign to install one or the other tool on my machine.
I just noticed that W3C validator now wants me to confirm that I'm a human… That's a sign to install one or the other tool on my machine.
On our last hike we sat on a public picknick table to eat our waffles with apple sauce. Not even two minutes in, a neighboring restaurant owner (has his own fenced-in outdoor seating) decided that it would be a good time to make some horrendous noise with his leaf blower. Practically nobody else was around. What a fuckwit. Happened the previous times, too. We then aborted our break after five minutes. I will never eat or drink anything at that place, that's for sure. I'm convinced that he does that to lots of folks who have their own food with them, hence do not stop in at him and there are no paying customers around in his garden.
about:config
by changing layout.testing.overlay-scrollbars.always-visible
to true
as I found out by experimenting.
> […] I can regenerate the entire page with an XSLT stylesheet. It will be like a static site generator, but worse.
Hahaha, exactly what I was thinking. :-D
Looking at the changes between HTML 3.2 and 4.0, apart from the XML properties, you could even have used HTML 3 instead of 4. Maybe even 2. I could not be bothered to look up what 3 added, though.
I chose HTML 5 for my stuff just because I can remember the doctype and meta tag to specify the encoding. The charset is of course also included in the HTTP headers, I just keep it in the HTML so that I easily cover the extremely rare use case of saving something to disk.


> [Compared to Excel] serious financial, medical or industrial applications should probably stick to the more mature calculation capabilities found in Factorio circuits.
@darch I could be wrong, but I don't see a pun here, maybe some English native speaker can correct me. From my point of view it's just a parody on Robin Hood with some ridiculously funny spin. Monty Python at their finest. The lupin part *might* be a reference to tulip mania, when prices in the Netherlands for tulips bulbs went through the sky in 1637. Or it's just some random thing without a deeper meaning.
Our four hour long night hike turned out to be really great. It was surprisingly warm, most of the way a t-shirt was enough. Only in the end we had to pull over a jumper for the long sleeves. We saw plenty of bats flying around us and also a marten in one of the villages. It was sitting in the middle of the road and then hid under a parked car. On the downside, tons of mozzies were also around.

In one place the street lights shining on the tree leaves in combination with slight mist turned the scenery into something really incredible. Can't describe it other than mystical. Just super beautiful and impossible (for me) to capture on film.
We brought our torches, but didn't end up using them. The moon and starlit sky was enough. Only in the forests it sometimes got a bit dark on us. The first night hike of the season was a great success and will be repeated several times.

https://lyse.isobeef.org/waldspaziergang-2023-05-28/

fc
. @abucci Heck yeah, great story! :-D I never came across something similar. I know these buses exist, but I've never seen one in person.



That reminds me that I have to get replacement ear pads for both my headset and headphone. The synthetic leather is falling apart and black fuzzy crap ends up all over my face. Also, my headset's left ear piece has some intermittent contact that seems to get worse lately. Shaking my head usually fixes it for some time. Not sure if trying to repair that will finally break the headset instead.
At the Fuchseck summit a guy went down the steep mountain straight through the brush. So we thought, let's take this beaten path, too. But there was none. We couldn't figure out where he went and which route he took. We only heard the rustling of leaves and cracking of twigs and branches at the beginning when we were still taking photos up top. But we said, let's try it anyway, when he manages it, we will, too. The North slope was about 70° steep and covered with 15 cm of leaves. Super slippery, we slid more than walked. But once committed, there was no easy way back up again. There were lots of sketchy sections and I wondered what the heck I was doing there. We had to brace ourselves with one or sometimes both hands on the slope. Then we saw the dude sitting in a tree and we continued our adventure downhill. 29-31 show the much easier parts closer to the bottom before we hit an official path.
Later we took a new well-graveled logging trail which then dead ended. So we then decided to walk through the tall grass in the forest to meet a parallel footpath. We survived much crazier terrain earlier. So what could possibly go wrong? This long patch of grass was an old, now probably abandonned path anyways. I misjudged the distance to the other path quite a bit and it took us much longer than anticipated. Finally, on the real path, I had collected ten ticks on my pants! Bloody bastards.
After the shower I now feel like a new person. I reckon I'll find some great sleep tonight.


jot
before. Often I simply use pwgen -sy 64
.



Can't get enough and want more? This way! I've got you covered.


I'm thinking that I might be better off if they can be just hung without any tools. The first thing that came to mind are two U-shaped hooks which are attached to the box and get simply hung into the sawhorse beam. In order to avoid bumps on the beam by the hooks, I could mortise two slots, so the hooks are then flush. But then I have some mortises in the top, which might not be ideal when the tool wells are not attached.
Another idea is to mount two larger dowels (~20 mm diameter) to the side of the tool well and drill two matching holes into the beam. Then the tool well could be slid in from the side. To avoid coming loose, a wedge could be inserted in a mortise of the dowel on the other side of the beam. Like a traditional wooden joint in benches and tables. Let's see what I end up with.~

If I press the trigger button halfway down (until I feel a slight resistence), the camera sets focus and exposure. They get locked when I hold it halfway. Only if I press it all the way, the picture is taken. After today's adventure the camera now triggers even when the button is only pressed halfway. Sometimes, maybe 10%, it works as it should. But the rest of the time, the photo is taken prematurely. I can feel both points, but the second one seems to have shifted upwards to the first one. This really sucks.
Had some nice fog and sunset today:

https://lyse.isobeef.org/waldspaziergang-2023-04-28/

# doctype = whatever
? Also, which problem does this solve? What would clients do differently? And humans just could look at the comment or URL and see that this feed makes use of extensions – if they care. Twtxt purists would certainly hate such a new thing, too, I don't think it helps them in any way. So I don't see the use case for that. Can you please elaborate, @darch, what you had in mind?My feed's preamble starts with (links to be debatable):
# Learn more about twtxt at: https://github.com/buckket/twtxt
# This feed makes use of some extensions: https://dev.twtxt.net/


