the Postgres requirement is a dealbreaker for me. I don't get why all these "simple" self-hosted apps need a bloated database. how many users is a self-hoster going to have, maybe 1-10? SQLite can easily handle thousands. I'm currently using Authelia, and it even has a database-less YAML option for managing users
how is it the world's first when there are several ISPs that have been offering 10g fiber for the past year
pretty proud of my ratio of 6 yrs

exactly this. I have no desire to watch a "talkie" in 2025. movies from my childhood don't even really hold up anymore. society and culture changes so fast. I think it would be a real niche group of ppl that go back and watch these old movies
helping children learn to read sounds like an ideal use case for an LLM. An app that utilizes its own users interactions to enhance its own capabilities is not inherently malicious and is vastly different from selling user data to third parties or training on scraped content from others.
And what are you even talking about with the "children could face disciplinary or legal consequences for noncompliance" nonsense. where was that in the article?
saving private ryan, just such a good movie. and a Christmas story every year
extensions on mobile are published as normal apps, so yes the process/requirements are the same as publishing any app on the app store
Safari on mobile iOS/iPad have supported extensions since iOS 15 (2021), it supported limited 3rd party content blockers since iOS 9 (2015)
Who needs a list of features when we have more emojis than an iPhone keyboard update
so it makes JS code look better
the point of jellyfin and Plex is that it plays everywhere, ie. TV, mobile, remotely; not just on a PC connected to local network. although neat, this is far from a replacement for a media manager/remote streamer