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For those curious about 1-bit computers, see Usagi Electric’s playlist:
Moved from @Crul@lemmy.world
For those curious about 1-bit computers, see Usagi Electric’s playlist:
You’re welcome!
FYI: You can edit the post and include a link to the add-on so others can see it without reading the comments. EDIT: Thanks!
Image Max URL (Web - GitHub - Firefox addon) was able to get a 3840x2160 version.
My 2 cents: I have a similar relation with smartphones as yours.
In my case, what I fear the most is some app getting my contact list and using it to send some kind of “XXX has joined YYY service” notification to all of them. Also, I didn’t like that Google had all the data they wanted, so I ended with 2 smartphones:
AFAIK I’ve only had one incident because I trusted Telegram too much. There is always non-zero risk, but this works for me.
I’m not sure I understand, there are still plenty of sites with RSS Feeds, native or via 3rd parties (OpenRSS, RSSHub, nitter, proxigram).
And for those websites without them, scrapping to RSS is (IMHO) the easiest solution. See pipes.digital.
Anything with similar functionality would need to reinvent the wheel and implement the same features that RSS has.
But maybe I’m missing something…
Yep, that’s why I added the twitter source too.
Source: https://www.commitstrip.com/2015/04/27/the-eye-opener-commit/
Also on twitter:
I’ve only used on the desktop, but there is Proxigram, an alternative frontend for IG.
Or turning them into good old time RSS?
Two options that I’m aware:
Proxigram (it tries to embed images, doesn’t always work): https://codeberg.org/ThePenguinDev/Proxigram/wiki/Instances
Open RSS (does not embed images): https://openrss.org/
I think you’re confusing “arbitrarily large” with “infinitely large”. See Wikipedia Arbitrarily large vs. (…) infinitely large
Furthermore, “arbitrarily large” also does not mean “infinitely large”. For example, although prime numbers can be arbitrarily large, an infinitely large prime number does not exist—since all prime numbers (as well as all other integers) are finite.
For integers I disagree (but I’m not a mathematician). The set of integers with infinite digits is the empty set, so AFAIK, it has probability 0.
Doesn’t it depends on whether we are talking about real or integer numbers?
EDIT: I think it also works with p-adic numbers.
I also think that’s correct… if we are talking about real numbers.
People are probably thinking about integers. I’m not sure about OP.
EDIT: I think it also works with p-adic numbers.
I was going to suggest yt-dlp, but this seems to be for android… right? In that case, I don’t know if yt-dlp works there.
Anyway, for those on PCs, you can use yt-dlp "PLAYLIST_URL"
.
Some useful options:
--download-archive videos.txt
: this will keep track of downloaded files in case you want to interrupt an continue later. You can change the filename videos.txt
to whatever you want.-R infinite --file-access-retries infinite --fragment-retries infinite --retry-sleep http:exp=1:20 --retry-sleep fragment:exp=1:20 --retry-sleep file_access:exp=1:20 --retry-sleep extractor:exp=1:20
: infinite retries for different error types, for those with unreliable connections.-o "%%(playlist_index)s - %%(title)s.%%(id)s.%%(ext)s"
: output file format --cookies cookies.txt
: if it’s a private list, you will need to provide your (yt-logged-in-)browser cookies. See cookies.txt add-on.Not an answer, but a warning: I’ve tried a couple of them and they may break some sites and I found very difficult to debug (probably because how many addons I have). If you notice weird things, try disabling the addon.
I just installed the recommmended Consent-O-Matic and it does work in the only website I remember was broken with other addons. Looks promising, thanks!
AFAIK, they are used as relays.
From https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1-bit_computing#1-bit
See also the playlist linked in the other comment with more explanations:
1-Bit Breadboard Computer - Usagi Electric (YouTube)