Mozilla has loads of projects, not just the browser. I doubt more than a 30 work exclusively on the engine nowadays.
merthyr1831
Andreas Kling, the founder and lead dev, has a massive love for Twinings tea and spent a few Dev logs working on improving their website with the end goal being ordering his tea from them :)
EDIT: There's a fix. https://unpackerr.zip Automatically unzips these rar containers into coherent files for importing via sonarr/radarr. I suppose you can do this manually with tar if you're brave.
It's even worse, though. They've all seen the emperor without his clothes - barely able to form a coherent sentence whilst his aides scramble to keep him from mentally deteriorating into a coma before November. Yet I'm watching liberals convince themselves that his PR-controlled twitter is somehow evidence that the president is not only lucid but competent.
"were crushing it" as I'm crushing thousands of Palestinians under rubble made by US bombs that he gleefully supplied to a warmongering fascist?
It would be nice if people read the post and the project before randomly making assumptions such as implying the project started from scratch yesterday or its run by some amateurs, this is a 4 year old project! It's founded by a former KHTML/Webkit developer for Apple!
Sure, but an individual website may use only a few of those standards. Ladybird devs will pick a website they like to use - Reddit, Twitter, Twinings tea, etc. and improve adherence to X or Y standards to make that one website look better. In turn, thousands of websites suddenly work perfectly, and many others work better than before.
Ladybird is largely conformant to the majority of HTML standards now. It's about the edge cases (and where standards aren't followed by websites) and performance. This isn't a new project.
Ladybird was born from SerenityOS, which is a hobbyist unix-like (or POSIX compliant?) OS that simply aimed to do things "from the ground up". It just happened that they needed to make a browser, and the response was to make one from scratch.
From there it seemed to have brought a lot of attention organically to the point where it can stand on its own, but originally it was never intended to be a "third browser engine" from its inception.
Front End:
- You can have multiple users,
- tracks your progress in a series,
- gives you imdb and soundtrack info,
- metadata and cover art.
- Automatically handles discoverability - Log in with your account and it'll find your server wherever you are in the world!
- Great app support across mobile, tv, web, and desktop.
- Automatically syncs to films/tv folder(s) when new shows are downloaded.
Back end:
- Versatile and stable torrenting client.
- Can control up/download speed
- Online front end can be a lifesaver when diagnosing issues remotely.
- FOSS
- Automatically discovers torrents for your chosen shows and movies, and forwards them onto torrent client.
- Can track unreleased content, downloading it as it becomes available.
- Supports user-configurable quality formats to weed out torrents that don't meet your quality or space requirements.
- Automatically searches multiple trackers - If one tracker lacks a show, it can try another!
- FOSS
- Indexes thousands of known torrent trackers for all kinds of content, with sonarr/radarr-ready configs.
- Add tracker to Prowlarr and it syncs to Sonarr/Radarr clients automatically
- Add your own private trackers too with a simple interface
- FOSS
Operating System:
- Debian-based server OS with powerful terminal interface for managing and starting your first streaming server
- Rock-solid stability of debian, paired with a curated packaging system that reduces risks of breaking configurations
- Popular services are auto-configured to align with best practices, such as Nextcloud, Plex, Sonarr etc. all installing and configuring their own databases at install
- Powerful utilities for managing disks, files, power management and other server necessities with minimal existing knowledge of the command line
- Can be set up in a day on a raspberry pi, and be streaming torrented content by the evening!
- Great support, both with hardware and software. The devs are active and helpful on github if you have problems.
- Loads of tutorials for installing every single service you could need for a piracy server, from VPNs to linking services together and accessing them remotely.
- FOSS
DNS:
- Link your IP to a friendly domain name for free.
- Like, free. I can type in my domain anywhere on earth and access my rpi server easily.
- Loads of choices available
- Just log in once every 6 months to keep the DNS listing active.
Yeah I didn't realise they were rar formats from how they show up on disk - Usually people name.their.torrents.like.this so it fucks up typical file name conventions.
I'll keep that in mind too, thanks! Not using qbitmanage yet though I'll have to look into that ๐