Ah, that's fair enough. Thanks for letting me know!
Thanks for your work. I look forward to installing this soon!
Do you have any plans to support importing from similar services such as Raindrop, Omnivore, or Shiori?
Battery life and screen quality first and foremost. They’re often related to each-other. Battery life because I feel it’s the one aspect that hasn’t improved very much at all over the past 10 years, and if I don’t have enough battery, I literally can’t use my phone. Screen quality because I look at the screen whatever I do with the phone, so if the screen is bad, everything else cannot make it a better phone.
Notesnook is not ready for self-hosting yet, but it’s up next on their roadmap. I’ve been trying it out in advance and it seems to work ok. The only issue I have with it is that it logs you out of the apps way too often.
What was causing you to miss notifications? My experience is that on iPhone you get too many notifications, because of the lack of fine-grained control over notification categories.
Personal Finance has very little activity, sadly…
I didn't know that was possible. Thanks for sharing!
It's good. Just keep in mind that it hasn't been updated in a while...
I haven't tried all of those, but I like Deezer. It plays music and it's much less pushy about podcasts or other crap that Spotify always clutters your start page with. The queue interface is also simpler to use. The only downside I see is that search is noticeably slower than Spotify on desktop.
Yes, up to 512 bits since Skylake. But there are very few real-world tasks that can make use of such wide data paths. One example is media processing, where a 512-bit register could be used to pack 8 64-bit operands and act on all of them simultaneously, because there is usually a steady stream of data to be process using similar operations. In other tasks, where processing patters can't make use of such batched approaches, the extra bits would essentially be wasted.
What AP would you recommend for use with it?
Thanks! I had tried a different instance's hosted version, but that would only let me log in with an account from that instance. Time to cut out the middleman!