gotschi
|
2 years ago
|
on: Lorapaper: A connected e-paper device that runs on light
oh, and the data i display on mine gets fetched from my homeassistant
gotschi
|
2 years ago
|
on: Lorapaper: A connected e-paper device that runs on light
gotschi
|
2 years ago
|
on: Lorapaper: A connected e-paper device that runs on light
i already made a paper display using a wemos pico (has battery, charging and indicator) but this is very cool!
have to charge mine every few months but also display a lot more information
gotschi
|
4 years ago
|
on: Command Line Video Player
i use metaX for my movie and show database, game playthroughs and others might need different tools
gotschi
|
5 years ago
|
on: Apple’s Anti-Tracking Plans for iPhone
Fonts by Google, really?
gotschi
|
11 years ago
|
on: Apple Introduces iOS 8
gotschi
|
12 years ago
|
on: How I Set Up My Home Network – NAS and Raspberry Pi
I really dont know what software is available from the NAS manufacturers or the community. All i can say is that my Netgear WNDR3700v2 can handle transmission, smb, ssh, afp, an apache server and tvheadend pretty well on OpenWRT and there are many more packages (including nzbget) available.
gotschi
|
12 years ago
|
on: How I Set Up My Home Network – NAS and Raspberry Pi
he could have transformed his router into a NAS using either the proprietary software or OpenWRT/Tomato etc... This way you dont need any extra NAS and just plug in your external drive via USB. The performance is the only bottleneck I've experienced with routers (cpu speed is about 200-600mhz).
Other than that it works really well with my raspberry pi xbmc!
gotschi
|
12 years ago
|
on: How far the once-mighty SourceForge has fallen
The article may get some things twisted with some warez definitions, but the main problem is: a once trusted site lets users download a different software than anyone is searching for - this leads to confusion at first because users don't know what they are downloading and installing anyway...
gotschi
|
12 years ago
|
on: Don't reinvent the scrollbar
This may be all true, theres nothing I can say against this article, but there's really a reason to split an article or comments section to multiple pages - battery performance.
On heavy ad-based sites with flash content etc, the page rendering can get really cpu intensive - at least on smartphones and tablets.. (I'm referring to a 30000x1024 pixels to scroll through. OSX sometimes really fights with them and smooth scrolling (i have a retina macbook, maybe thats the reason, macericks should bring some improvements to that...) on ios can get laggy.
Tumblr pages with infinite scrolling and heavy imagery are an example for that.
Nice article though!
gotschi
|
13 years ago
|
on: HTML5 App on a Floppy Disk
just copy the content to your hdd? and back for permanent changes - is that a big problem for you? this way at least you can satisfy your fetish for floppy disks :D
gotschi
|
13 years ago
|
on: Quintus - An Easy, Fun HTML5 Game Engine For Mobile, Desktop and Beyond
At this point I'd like to suggest all the gamers try out our free Game Creation website...
http://playtin.comkthxbye