I was going to say Digital Illusions but for Motorhead, the racing game. The OST for that game has been in my music rotation for decades and it’s still in my top 3 of all time.
Turning it on by default would be a massive disservice to the work that domain registries and registrars have been doing to allow Unicode to be used in domain names. In Spanish speaking countries the ñ character is pretty ubiquitous for example, and the workaround of replacing it with an n creates many problems like misdirected web traffic and typos in email addresses. Unicode in URLs and domain names is a feature, abuse should be attacked by means other than disabling it.
The local and remote port options sound exactly like something I’ve needed multiple times in the past, I’ll keep this saved for when it happens again. Great stuff!
Is VR really so ubiquitous to warrant these concerns? In my opinion most of the warnings about how this technology encourages “escaping reality” apply more to things that have had an established place in society for decades, namely phones, social media and online gaming. I have two kids and a VR headset is the least of my concerns, but they could be sucked in to the non-reality of a personal phone in two seconds if I allow it.
I recommend NSD or Knot for strictly authoritative servers. BIND is great too, but it is built to do both authoritative and caching DNS which makes it a bit too “big” for the task of serving only authoritative DNS data. You can definitely configure BIND to only serve authoritative data though.
I can’t comment on running from a container, I’ve always worked with NSD/Knot/BIND building directly from source.
Well, you can fact check later right? If nothing else kids will learn to be bored again, which is good.
No problem! FreshRSS really is amazing so I’m happy to help and spread the love.
Using .site-content container clearfix
didn’t work because those are actually three separate CSS classes, so you’d have to use only one - for example .site-content
. However, it looks like .site-content
is too big, as it includes the website’s sidebar as well. You may already know this but in Firefox and Chrome you can right click anywhere on the website and use the Inspect option to look at the source, and clicking on a section of the source highlights the corresponding section of the website and this will help you find exactly the CSS class you’re looking for. I did this on a couple articles from Humble Bundle and found a couple of options:
.post
: This includes only the content of the post, excluding the title and the image..site-main
: This includes the title, author, image and the content.
Another useful tool in FreshRSS I forgot to mention is “CSS selector of the elements to remove”. You can use it to remove certain section from the full article, I’d recommend removing .sharedaddy
and .entry-footer
(the sharing links at the end of the article), and also .entry-header
if you use .site-main
as the CSS selector for the full article (.entry-header
is the title of the article, but FreshRSS already fetches it from the RSS feed so you don’t need it in the body of the article as well). You can remove multiple sections by using a comma-separated list of CSS classes to remove:
.entry-header, .sharedaddy, .entry-footer
I’ve always known Drop for their audio sales and products, I hope they continue to collaborate with audio brands in the future. The Sennheiser/Drop HD58x is one of my favorites, it was hard to beat for the price when I bought them.
Final Fantasy VII and Chrono Cross are my absolute all time favorites. Ori and the Blind Forest is a more recent soundtrack that blew me away. The soundtrack for the Motorhead racing game is also a classic for me.
Before you go reading all that, out of curiosity I looked around the RuneScape site and found the News RSS feed here:
https://secure.runescape.com/m=news/latest_news.rss
That feed contains only titles, thumbnails and a very small preview of each article. However, with FreshRSS you don’t need to do scraping/crawling at all to get full articles from limited RSS feeds like this one. Here’s what you do:
.c-news-article__content
in that text box. You can click on the button next to the text box to preview the full article that FreshRSS will retrieve.That should do it. The CSS selector essentially tells FreshRSS which section of the full article’s HTML/CSS is the body of the article, which FreshRSS then uses to populate the body of the RSS feed.
It can be done directly in FreshRSS and I’ve done it successfully with a few websites, though the process is fairly involved. Here’s a starting point, from the FreshRSS documentation:
https://freshrss.github.io/FreshRSS/en/users/11_website_scraping.html
This blog post (also linked in the FreshRSS docs above) proved extremely useful as an example on how to get started:
https://danq.me/2022/09/27/freshrss-xpath/
Good luck!
I think you still have to specify the URL up to the greader.php page, maybe in your case it would be
https://freshrss.example.com/api/greader.php