One Paragraph of project description goes here
These instructions will get you a copy of the project up and running on your local machine for development and testing purposes. See deployment for notes on how to deploy the project on a live system.
Unless otherwise noted (either in this file or in a file's copyright section) the contents of this gist are Copyright ©️2020 by Christopher Allen, and are shared under spdx:Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 4.0 International (CC-BY-SA-4.) open-source license.
If you more tips and advice like these, you can become a monthly patron on my GitHub Sponsor Page for as little as $5 a month; and your contributions will be multipled, as GitHub is matching the first $5,000! This gist is all about Homebrew, so if you like it you can support it by donating to them or becoming one of their Github Sponsors.
Once in a while, you may need to cleanup resources (containers, volumes, images, networks) ...
// see: https://github.com/chadoe/docker-cleanup-volumes
$ docker volume rm $(docker volume ls -qf dangling=true)
$ docker volume ls -qf dangling=true | xargs -r docker volume rm
### | |
### | |
### UPDATE: For Win 11, I recommend using this tool in place of this script: | |
### https://christitus.com/windows-tool/ | |
### https://github.com/ChrisTitusTech/winutil | |
### https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6UQZ5oQg8XA | |
### iwr -useb https://christitus.com/win | iex | |
### | |
### |
Go to github | |
Create new repository [don't need to initialize with the readme (can add later)] | |
Go to R Studio | |
File -> New Project -> Version Control -> Git | |
Ctrl+V repository URL from GitHub | |
File -> New -> Markdown, enter Title, etc. | |
In the Markdown window, change "output=html_document" to "output=github_document" | |
Knit the document for the first time, will prompt you to save | |
Save as Title.rmd | |
In the "git" tab of the R studio Environment window, you will notice that the knit produced: |
#Requires -Version 7 | |
# Version 1.2.13 | |
# check if newer version | |
$gistUrl = "https://api.github.com/gists/a208d2bd924691bae7ec7904cab0bd8e" | |
$latestVersionFile = [System.IO.Path]::Combine("$HOME",'.latest_profile_version') | |
$versionRegEx = "# Version (?<version>\d+\.\d+\.\d+)" | |
if ([System.IO.File]::Exists($latestVersionFile)) { |
# /etc/network/interfaces | |
# | |
auto lo | |
iface lo inet loopback | |
# device: eth0 | |
iface eth0 inet manual | |
# IPv4 bridge | |
# (connect ONLY your firewall/router KVM instance here, this is the WAN device!) |
{ | |
"Condition statement": { | |
"prefix": "cond", | |
"body": [ | |
"$1 { $0; break }" | |
], | |
"description": "Switch condition statement" | |
}, | |
"Condition single quoted string statement": { | |
"prefix": "condsqstr", |
So yesterday brought the sad news that Google Reader is being killed off. C’est la vie it seems, given it was a Google product. In my search for an alternative I rediscovered Fever and decided to see if I could run it up for free on Heroku. Onwards...
Personally I think the news about Reeder is quite sad, as I would quite happily have paid for it as a service. In fact I like RSS so much that I actually shelled out the $30 for Fever when it first came out years ago (I was also pretty massive Shaun Inman fanboy if I’m being honest).
I ended up setting Fever aside because screw having to manage self-hosting for PHP and MySQL, right?
If you’re new to Fever I recommend going and checking it out, but also reading the post in response to the Google Reader announcement by Fevers author, Shaun, for a good list of what Fever is and isn’t.
Enough jibba-jabba!
// Variables used by Scriptable. | |
// These must be at the very top of the file. Do not edit. | |
// icon-color: cyan; icon-glyph: magic; | |
// the node sonos http api base url (running on your Pi for example) | |
let sonosBaseUrl = "http://192.168.178.10:5005" | |
// optional for cover art: the ip address of one of your Sonos speakers | |
let sonosPlayerUrl = "http://192.168.178.38:1400" | |
let param = args.widgetParameter |