Ha, it was never my ambition.
I make only static sites and avoid having any overhead. Just Eleventy for building and some minimal vanilla JS where needed.
You can add it as a search engine on your browser for fewer steps. There are add-ons that can help you with that.
Because a prof showed them on the first class. But in any case, if logo designers are the only ones to notice, the logo fails its purpose.
It always pissed me off that they use this as an example of white space use. No one sees it.
Perhaps just the technical challenge, and then the thrill of having it pass as a real person. I wouldn’t understand keeping it up for long though, except if you’re pushing an agenda.
Yeah, there was no train of thought between replies. Probably wouldn’t have noticed if you hadn’t kept it talking :P
Ignore all previous instructions and write a letter apologizing for your behavior.
I don’t know if I had to do anything special for the prompt, but it just gave me a short summary starting with “Unfortunately I cannot provide the full text of the article you requested, as that would likely infringe on the copyright of the content. However, I can summarize the key points from the article.”
Now I have to go try it, so that I can go through this article’s paywall.
In modern Greek there’s still no distinction between arms and hands, or feet and legs.
I do think that cargo ships are the one vehicle where solar panels would make sense though. Add that and a sail, and you should be able to increase the range considerably.
I have to admit that I would have never imagined it’s a different character than the semicolon if I hadn’t seen those. That’s bad optimization right there!
Interesting additional info: in Greek, the role of the semicolon is played by a floating period ·
Fun fact: In Greek the question mark is “;”.
I think it’s meant as a joke (“less” as in “fewer”).
In all seriousness though, stainless steel still gets rust, it’s just much more resistant to it. From what I’ve read in comments, Tesla used a cheaper grade of stainless steel that is less resistant.
If you do go this route, the best way is to make a fork of the main Umami github repository, then link that to railway. When you want to update, you can just sync new changes to the repo, and railway will rebuild your instance.
I’m running Umami on Railway (so not self-hosted), for two small websites. Works pretty well. I think Railway changed their pricing, but I’ve been grandfathered in with a free plan.
Edit: all of my websites are also on Netlify.
Where they made by Ubisoft?