Based on the username, I think it was heading this way regardless.
Based on the username, I think it was heading this way regardless.
Was it the movie Go where they thought they were getting involved in some sex thing, but it was actually Amway?
So. Much. Bloat. Otherwise good.
I…sigh… Cruising sailboat.
Only in single file mode (meaning opening the HTML as a file:// URL, making changes, and saving it again). Hosting it on a server, desktop, or raspberry pi with node is ridiculously simple these days. It’s completely backwards compatible, but TW5 changed the architecture quite a bit. You can drop that 10 year old file into a blank node instance, and it comes out perfectly.
Tiddlywiki. Simple in theory one you get your head around it. I live on a boat, and use it for inventory. Every item is entered, along with quantity and location so I can search and find where things are. Depending on the thing, additional information is stored as well. For food stuffs, nutrition info, brand, place I bought it, and price (useful going between countries). Recipes link to ingredients, so I can filter on what I have or what I need. For tech items, serial number, manuals, warranty information, and the like. And for certain items, checklists, or maintenance tasks, I link to the inventory item of my tools, so I know what I need and where to get it before starting a job.
For example, I have an entry for the outboard motor. I know that if I’m filling it with fuel, I need 2 stroke oil, gasoline, fuel filter. If I have to adjust the turning resistance, I know I’ll need a 10mm wrench. If I have to change the lower unit oil, I need a pump for oil, container for old oil, flathead screw driver for the plug, etc.
Shoot, they might even have digital checkouts!
Ah, it sounds to me like you’re wanting something kind of like the old Pimsleur German CDs. Looks like the current iteration is a subscription model with option to buy. I only remember the mp3s I downloaded years ago.
World building is actually a lot of fun to peruse.
The other thing that makes stack overflow good is that it’s a very specific problem, with a this works/this doesn’t result. Otherwise it seems to me like a collaborative Quora, which would be just as useful as regular Quora.
The better half downloads audiobooks from YouTube when on wifi, for offline listening.
I like downloading slow TV, so I don’t have to worry about streaming it, of I want to sleep to it or something.
26 tax laws? You mean 26 volumes, right? /S from the US.