I don't know what it is either :/
I'm also not exactly understanding how it can save people from sparse ATMs.
Damn, nice! Where was this?
Migadu. Yeah*. On the computer, I use mostly aerc (+notmuch), but hop on Thunderbird once in a while; on mobile I use K-9.
* If you are not looking for totally free options (though their cheapest plan is 20€/y and they give 50% discount to students), and if you don't care about email encryption (which you shouldn't). Migadu has a very good Pros/Cons page, I highly recommend you take a look, even if you're not using or planning to use their service.
Ye, rallye useful to quickly set up Windows
Even though I rarely setup Windows machines nowadays, here's my usual Ninite package: https://ninite.com/7zip-everything-firefox-gimp-greenshot-inkscape-libreoffice-notepadplusplus-putty-qbittorrent-revo-steam-sumatrapdf-teracopy-thunderbird-vlc-winscp-wiztree
- 7zip is just the best archive tool on Windows
- Everything is insanely useful, specially if you get into the habit of triggering through a hotkey every time you need something.
- Revo Uninstaller used to be a must for properly uninstalling programs, not sure how useful it still is with Windows 10 and 11.
- Sumatra is an excellent and very fast PDF reader.
- TeraCopy has a bunch of nice utilities, though it's copying/move graph is no longer relevant afaik.
- WizTree is a faster and nicer version of the old venerable WinDirStat, also very very useful to manage disk space.
I think security is a fair point, given caddy's younger age compared to nginx, but I wouldn't say it tried to do too much.
Why do you say that?
I've used both plenty and only once I thought Caddy was harder: caching. It requires you to install a plugin that also doesn't have the easiest of configs. I think there's a new and simpler one nowadays, but haven't tried it yet.
I now use Caddy by default for everything new I make/host.
Yeah, Typist is great and has potential for much more still! The big issue is something like the network effect, LaTeX has everything you could possibly want, pretty much, and people will continue to primarily support it because it's the biggest tool. It will be hard to break that cycle, but in the long run it may be possible.
Have you looked at all the different layers? A while back they added more of those, with different types of quests that don't appear normally.
StreetComplete is godsend. Editing OSM in JOSM, iD, etc, is not trivial and involves reading a lot of documentation and forum posts (if you care to do things right), which of course isn't anywhere near practical for small devices when you're on the go, surveying.
This app changed my whole routine. The interface is really solid and helps the community target important tasks, rewarding it with little prizes. Althewhile, the gamification is kept at a very healthy level, to avoid attracting leaderboard seekers and whatnot, which would certainly lower the quality of contributions.
I think the contribution day grid (akin to GitHub's thing) as well as the dynamic category explorer, the badges and the OSM-related projects it reveals to you bit by bit really bring everything together. It's an incredible tool!
For the experienced (and this is not said lightly), there is the expert version, which adds more advanced editing features for those looking for a bit more control in regular SC.
No no, it was just me being very silly and forgetting to write an important part of my comment .-.
Fixed, thanks!