When making this website, i wanted a simple, reasonable way to make it look good on most displays. Not counting any minimization techniques, the following 58 bytes worked well for me:
main {
max-width: 38rem;
padding: 2rem;
margin: auto;
}
Note
to active Office without crack, just follow https://github.com/WindowsAddict/IDM-Activation-Script,
you wiil only need to run
irm https://massgrave.dev/ias | iex
version: '2' | |
services: | |
api: | |
volumes: | |
- "nfsmount:${CONTAINER_DIR}" | |
volumes: | |
nfsmount: | |
driver: local | |
driver_opts: |
AES67 (an open standard for high quality audio over IP) is becoming mainstream in the world of broadcast and professional audio industries, however there is a very limited amount of open source software available to interoperate with it. As a result we are often just replacing XLRs with Ethernet, without taking advantage of the possibilites the software give. While Virtual Soundcards enable some of this, native network implementations would allow greater flexibility.
This is my wishlist of things that would help change that. Hopefully one day it can be turned into a AES67 Awesome List.
As open source has resulted in very rapid evolution of the web, I believe the same is possible for professional/broadcast audio.
It is possible that some of this already exists and I just havn't found it yet. Please add a comment below if you know of something!
http { | |
map $http_accept $extension { | |
default html; | |
application/json json; | |
} | |
server { | |
listen 80; | |
error_page 500 /500; |
# | |
# Ignore requests for useless dot files generated by OS X Finder (WebDAV). | |
# | |
# This little hack speeds-up a WebDAV access from the Finder significantly and | |
# also prevents messing storage with these annoying files. | |
# | |
location ~ \.(_.*|DS_Store|Spotlight-V100|TemporaryItems|Trashes|hidden)$ { | |
access_log off; | |
error_log off; |