how about jekyll? Lots of customization available.
how about jekyll? Lots of customization available.
Matt Parker’s humor hits me in just the right way.
The steamed hams in the outro captions was a departure from his normal jokes.
Mostly a copy from my comment when this was posted elsewhere.
I wish he went a little more into the microdot stuff and tried a little more for getting that small size down. Intelligence agencies aren’t the only ones who use microdots/micro print so there should be information out there.
If you want a more in depth look at just the photography stuff, Alec did quite a deep dive. https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLv0jwu7G_DFV6yW240e6CbiwCLaZ0Z6PV He also made a video about his development process, at least for color, and put that on conextras https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rW1cg3hDdc4
As a note, youtube seems to have changed something with metadata recently so when lemmy instances not based in the US populate, you only get a generic bit about what youtube is in the local to the instance language, as opposed the the video description. https://yiffit.net/post/11721047
Warning, towards the end there is a chapter titled “A Surprisingly Emotional Series”. It includes bits from 2 of those episodes. And another one of them right at the end.
Another perspective of the same trip https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nj9Oy2Jx2dM
He also has a great narrative flow to his videos. That makes a huge difference too. Poor flow can make a 5 min video a chore.
He mentions around 4:40 that straight as possible was a requirement here.
From the last eclipse, the difference between totality and not totality is night and day. Even at 99% you can’t take the eclipse glasses off. The closer you get the more of the secondary effect you can see, like the crescent shadows, and the overall dimming. here is an interactive map. The percent for each of the lines is on the right and bottom.
Glad it worked. It looks like its for getting the big stuff while communityboost is designed to help find the small.
From the way I read it, you create a user for the tool so when you submit your instance, it can run on your instance. One of the users chosen at random is here https://discuss.tchncs.de/u/communityboost
You can read a discussion about it here https://pawb.social/post/4136386
I also came across https://github.com/Fmstrat/lcs
Edit: Looks like https://sh.itjust.works/u/iso might be the user behind it.
There is a tool I’ve heard about that subscribes to remote communities for federation until a real subscription. https://boost.lemy.lol/
Nigel (NileRed) made his own. Its a bit toxic https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jLX1-tNnvEo