I love the Idea, and I think it's pretty smart.
When I'm doing work on my laptop, I always have my phone nearby. I think it's unlikely that both of them are compromised or stolen simultaneously.
Also, the Android app requires no device permissions, haven't seen that in a while.
You're obviously very frustrated by how people see the service, but you can't blame them.
The GIMP incident made pretty big news, and for many people, the name "SourceForge" will stay equivalent to a malware-injecting host. Anyone who decided to keep the name should have anticipated that.
Yes, it really is. Although I had absolutely no intentions of creating a game, I tried it out a few months back just because it's such a well-made project with an active community.
It may be increasingly hard to find because employees see things differently now.
It's a job market. My employer wants me to put in overtime and go out of my way to improve the company? Great, let's go. But I demand appropriate compensation.
I think that's a reasonable position. My company treats me as a human resource, I treat my company like my client who writes checks for the work I put in.
What I find interesting is that people who like those mate drinks are quite brand loyal (at least in my experience).
I've tried at least 10 different brands since I had my first Club Mate 15 years ago, and I hated every single one of them. A few friends hate Club Mate and only like a single other brand.
I'd like a dead-simple and globally accessible way of donating.
Like github/gitlab/etc allowing to easily deposit money via CC, Paysafecard, Google Wallet et al. The projects could have a "donate" button by default.
I often clone and browse projects and absolutely wouldn't hesitate to donate a few dollars here and there if it's just a click away.
There you have all stream files in a nice json format, which means opus and m4a for audio files.
I have a python project which is very quick to gather metadata, because I wanted to have a responsive YouTube app without using the browser. Had no time for it recently, though.
I think it depends on the income. But, considering many people buy regular watches costing 20 times more, I wouldn't see an Apple watch as a status symbol either.
There was a time where is discovered the speedrun and tas communities and binge-watched everything it has to offer. I was constantly amazed by what the players achieved, and I especially liked the ones where the gap between tas and human player closes.
SethBling made an elaborate, frame-perfect glitch exploit run of Super Mario World where he warps from the first level to the end credits - absolutely unbelievable.
On a desktop app, you can see what kind of request the program makes and which servers it contacts. With a webapp, you'll never know what the app does.
Also, the Android app requires no device permissions, haven't seen that in a while.