When StoryGraph gets its api (on the roadmap). That'll be delightful.
I'm still bummed GoodReads discontinued their official API. (They have an undocumented GraphQL one driving parts of their site you can use. Ish.)
When StoryGraph gets its api (on the roadmap). That'll be delightful.
I'm still bummed GoodReads discontinued their official API. (They have an undocumented GraphQL one driving parts of their site you can use. Ish.)
At a glance, I'm intrigued. Them actually having an API is something I've been missing for a while.
What I'm worried about is what they're planning to do for monetization. Ads? Accounts? Haven't dug enough to see yet if they've posted it.
Read it as Putin at first glance.
I'm not sure if the actual headline is particularly better or worse.
A phone outside of Apple/Google would be interesting, but not at that price point/specs.
web0 is web3 without all the corporate right-libertarian Silicon Valley bullshit.
That's certainly one way to phrase it. In bright yellow highlighted text.
How long until Reddit remembers they're providing RSS feeds?
Until then, good idea! I'm going to have to set that up.
I find the Mario Kart Blue Yourself records to be hilarious personally. Get a blue shell and hit yourself with it as quickly as possible.
Posted much the same on another share of this article (Lemmy is a bit odd so far that way).
The original paper was interesting enough reading for me. Lots of data but also lots of extrapolation. Science in a nutshell!
The original paper is a neat enough read. Lots of math explaining what they know and what they're extrapolating.
Mostly though, it's been moving for 50 years. It could erupt tomorrow. Or in a century. Or never. The press release at least mentions the possibility of it settling into a slow rise/fall cycle.
Neat read either way.
The security bit of me doesn't like the raw URL construction. Perhaps using the URL interface?
But it's a pain point for sure. I like the idea and am totally yoinking it, thanks!
Musk ordered the company to cut infrastructure costs, such as spending on cloud services, by $1 billion, a source had told Reuters in November.
At some point all these numbers seem like magic space money. Not that that's what they spend, but that's what they could reasonably (for whoever's definition thereof) cut?
Ooh, I'll have to check it out -- if there's anything approaching decent API support. I'm a coding geek that reads a silly amount and blogs all my reviews. I'd love to share them on other communities, but it's a bit annoying to do it on Goodreads anymore--and I've not found any of the others particularly better.
They do sometimes get on the weirdest not-security-related rants. Like a number of shows a few years back talking about melatonin.
Not a deal breaker IMO, just consider not taking medical advice from a computer security podcast. :)