Representing special interests != too much tax money. Orthogonal. It’s a mind boggling leap.
Did you try changing the highlighting colours to colours that do represent well?
Great answer! One minor point, I agree it’s not the motivation but it _does_ provide a unified workflow across service providers, which is valuable!
They also recently released a developer API [1]. The free access looks okay for personal use, I haven’t tried it yet. Oh and if your public transit service has GTFS then just install home assistant and get maps and…
This solves the underpants problem: https://twitter.com/quinnypig/status/1222516037704249344
This can be done with Bitbucket but the existing marketplace plug-in has been broken since they added the connect/disconnect webhooks as mandatory. Of course, the plug-in is provided by bitbucket …so that’s fun. I wrote…
NTSC is 29.97 fps and PAL is 25 fps - PAL was higher resolution because it sacrificed frame rate. (Doesn’t change your point of course) (Back in the cathode days seeing a TV set in Europe was like going to a strobe…
Representing special interests != too much tax money. Orthogonal. It’s a mind boggling leap.
Did you try changing the highlighting colours to colours that do represent well?
Great answer! One minor point, I agree it’s not the motivation but it _does_ provide a unified workflow across service providers, which is valuable!
They also recently released a developer API [1]. The free access looks okay for personal use, I haven’t tried it yet. Oh and if your public transit service has GTFS then just install home assistant and get maps and…
This solves the underpants problem: https://twitter.com/quinnypig/status/1222516037704249344
This can be done with Bitbucket but the existing marketplace plug-in has been broken since they added the connect/disconnect webhooks as mandatory. Of course, the plug-in is provided by bitbucket …so that’s fun. I wrote…
NTSC is 29.97 fps and PAL is 25 fps - PAL was higher resolution because it sacrificed frame rate. (Doesn’t change your point of course) (Back in the cathode days seeing a TV set in Europe was like going to a strobe…