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uBlock Origin on Firefox certainly works. There was a short period of about 5 days (a couple of months ago) where they were blocking playback with uBlock enabled, but it didn’t last long.
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uBlock Origin on Firefox certainly works. There was a short period of about 5 days (a couple of months ago) where they were blocking playback with uBlock enabled, but it didn’t last long.
^ This … my father has his doctorate, yet is talking about chem trails, stockpiling guns and food for the coming apocalypse, and is a full on Trump supporting MAGAT right wing Christian.
No QMK specific community that I’m aware of either, but in addition to this one there’s also mechanicalkeyboards@lemmy.ml but it’s pretty quiet over there.
I don’t have much advice on finding the caps, or what will fit on it, but the profile that Keychron sells on their low profile boards is LSA (and appears to be their own profile). Using the profile name should give you a bit better search results, but it looks like there isn’t much out there that will fit those low profile switches.
It’s called an Associated Account Ban. Lots of reading available for that search term.
It’s to stop banned developers from getting new accounts, but often links accounts in questionable ways.
If you are handy with basic soldering and some programming, you could easily wire these to a controller, and program them to a key. That’s what I did with the ones I had.
Are you looking for a bare pedal that you can wire to a controller, or something that’s ready to plug in?
For something that’s ready to be wired to a controller, I used a couple of these: https://www.amazon.com/Momentary-Operated-Controller-Industrial-Anti-Skid/dp/B07KN6GLYD
They’re a single firm clicky button, with relatively short travel. I never really had any issue with them being pressed too easily.
I’ve always found building complete things to be the best way to learn (since you have to solve all of the problems for the entire app to finish), so IMO this would be a good project to learn on.
My mom buys these cheap LED bulbs from Amazon and about half burn out quickly (probably 10% are DOA).
We have 100% LEDs throughout our fifth wheel (about 30 of them), and they are all still going strong (all installed in 2015, and used daily since then).
I think there’s a serious difference in quality available and it certainly shows.
In 2008(ish) we rewired our house (built in the '20s) and replaced every fixture. We probably had 25 CFL bulbs (most in ceiling fans), and had no losses for the several years that we owned the house after that. But I remember paying way more for bulbs in years before that and having them all fail fairly quickly.
Just switching to a basic qwerty layout for gaming would simplify that quite a lot
This … I’ve been a Dvorak typist for 15+ years. I have a querty layer for gaming, and a second Dvorak layer for when I switch from Windows to MAC so that I can use my same single key chords (cut / copy / paste / undo / redo / etc).
Xcode seems to get worse with each release.
The really basic things that it’s missing are frustrating too, like bookmarks. This has been a feature of every other IDE I’ve used since '98 when I started programing in VB6.
A few versions ago they removed the ability to tear a tab out of the IDE to have it open separately.
The local .NET user groups in my region have dried up over the last decade, but we used to have a few great ones, and yearly regional code camps. The community that I’ve dealt with has always been great.
Lippert is one of the two or three manufacturers that makes pretty much everything in or on an RV.
They own Thomas Payne (furniture), Furrion (most of the interior electronics), and probably a bunch more that I can’t remember at this point.
They aren’t a Grand Design company, but GD doesn’t have two many choices when it comes to RV parts, and Lippert is probably the largest player in the market.
Probably because 8 doesn’t come out for several months, and they want the fixes now.
The official tutorials are a pretty decent starting point.
Do you really need video?
My monitors have multiple inputs, so I just use a USB switch for my mouse and keyboard, and then switch the monitors between devices as needed.