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aaronpk_tv
To address these issues, we asked ourselves if we could create a visual impression of the image using only 200 bytes. Why 200 bytes? In order to remove that second network request, we needed to include some facsimile of the image itself in the initial network request.
final ward: .75oz Rye .75oz Green Chartreuse .75oz Maraschino .75oz Lemon Juice
1 1⁄2 oz. gin 1 oz. elderflower liqueur, like St. Germain 3⁄4 oz. fresh lime juice 3⁄4 oz. green Chartreuse Dash of orange bitters
1 egg white 2 ounces earl grey tea infused gin** ¾ ounce lavender simple syrup ¾ ounce fresh squeezed lemon juice Lavender sprig for garnish
I have been living on this system for a few months now and am thrilled how well it works. Every morning I arise and marvel at the free, reliable energy generated in a cosmic fusion reactor and beamed to my apartment through space. Of course, solar would have been prohibitively expensive and complicated had I not reduced my consumption to a fraction of what the average home uses. Here is how I did it.
silo.pub supports "native" authentication now! #indieweb #micropub
This project configures your Raspberry Pi to connect to the Internet through ethernet, and share that connection over WiFi.
Transparent proxy server that works as a poor man's VPN. Forwards over ssh. Doesn't require admin. Works with Linux and MacOS. Supports DNS tunneling.
Our method is fundamentally different from previous approaches. It reconstructs a full 3D camera path and world model. This enables smoothing the camera path in space-time and generating an output video with a constant-speed camera, skipping over 'slow' parts of the input video, such as waiting times in front of red lights. Just as importantly, our method can fill the missing regions in the video above by stitching together pixels from multiple input frames. Thanks to these two innovations we can handle much 'wilder' input videos, such as climbing or riding.
Arguments tend to fizzle out quickly if the participants are able to make a fully fleshed-out thought, so we’ll limit every thought to a ridiculously small size, say 140 characters.
Echochamber.js is a third-party script you can install to add a simple comment form to your blog post or website. why not just use disqus? Because then there'd be a chance that someone would read the comments. You might have to read those comments. You don't want that. When a user submits a comment, echochamber.js will save the comment to the user's LocalStorage, so when they return to the page, they can be confident that their voice is being heard, and feel engaged with your very engaging content. It does not make any HTTP requests. Since LocalStorage is only local, you and your database need not be burdened with other people's opinions.