This is the tool I have been looking for quite some time. I don't know why my searches returned only the simplest screenshot tools that are available on Linux. I have been using ShareX on Windows and was surprised to not find a similarly powerful tool on Linux. Now, I know that it was because of my rusty duck-duck-fu (or search is basically useless nowadays).
For a moment I perceived that as "Flutter" and immediately thought, "Of course, Google is shutting down another project." Perhaps that's enough screen time for today.
Yes, there is a slight difference in that, I would like the RSS reader to find other social accounts (Mastodon, Lemmy, etc.) that shared the same link and bring them in context so that the user can directly interact with those as well. I know it's not trivial to do, but one gets to dream, right?
Working with a 300 line method is not fun, believe me. Everything is in one place and you don't have to change many files, yes, but due to the cognitive load, it's so much more effort to maintain it.
I always thought, the "correct" way of doing this was the other way around: the RSS reader would implement ActivityPub so you could "toot" from within you RSS client. It would perhaps attempt to collect other "toot"s about the same link, facilitating a discussion (and keeping everything at one place). But I think this is the next best thing, especially for those feeds you tend to share on the social networks (I don't think it's feasible to reproduce the RSS reader following with this).
> "More than 40% of Azure are running Linux and OSS workloads, and most of its infrastructure doesn’t have anything to do with Microsoft software at all."
It's fun to play. Thanks for sharing. One suggestion: I thought I had 4 attempts to get it right, but I was actually just tweaking the original 30 character prompt. It was too late when I saw the small text over the text box describing the process. Maybe instead of "attempt" you could call them "tweak"s or "adjustment"s. Something like: "You start with an initial prompt and 3 adjustments."
I would love to have an e-ink Android tablet with reasonable refresh rates. The article mentions Onyx BOOX Tab, but if I remember correctly, that one had some problems related to licensing [1]. Not sure if those issues has been resolved by now.
Thank you for sharing.