Neat! Generating PDFs from RSS feeds is a great idea. Some thoughts:
I have a Kindle - something I'd find valuable would be having a digest of "Today's top stories" sent to my kindle's email address as an epub so I can check it out each day. But on Kindle, I think the 3 column layout would be too narrow to read - it makes sense on A4, but not smaller. How do you do your daily sync to ReMarkable?
> curious how others handle the "too many newsletters" problem
I like to have everything funnelled into my RSS reader, pick a few things that sound interesting each day, and archive the rest. For the getting everything into RSS part, I'm building https://mailgrip.io to help (it gets email newsletters into RSS feeds).
- recoverable.send_reset_password_instructions(to: email) if recoverable&.persisted?
+ recoverable.send_reset_password_instructions if recoverable&.persisted?
haha the first thing i would've caught in the initial PR was the file name... and the default setting of `confirmed: true`... seems like a big oversight or possibly an inside job (if im being conspiratorial)
Initially a single email could be passed into the API/form call and they would look it up. If found they would send a recovery to that email but it was the email the user supplied not what was in the DB.
Oh, no problem we looked it up so they are the same!
But then the ability to look up accounts from a list of emails was added. If any email matches the account lookup would succeed. Then they sent the reset link to that same user supplied value but OH NOEHS IT'S AN ARRAY NOW AND SOME MIGHT NOT HAVE MATCHED ACCOUNT EMAILS!
So they ended up sending out reset links to a tainted list of emails.
Rails "concerns" are the worst IMHO anyway, but looks like they aren't using strong params here either which is even worse. Also someone thought it was more elegant to reuse the tainted value which is par for the RoR course.
I've been playing around with the Playdate SDK (https://sdk.play.date) over the holidays and it's awesome for small games like the author describes.
Working with a tiny 1-bit screen and ~150MHz CPU puts some serious constraints on what you can do, which I've found to be pretty freeing (less analysis paralysis, more doing...)
Some feedback: the first thing I wanted to see on your landing page is what a screenshot taken with the tool looks like. It adds a bit of friction that to do that I need to browse to reddit, find a post, copy it in, wait for it to generate, etc.
I try to direct as much news to RSS as possible, where I can group feeds by topic, and not get distracted by a constant compulsion to refresh the page (which I feel strongly on HN and Twitter). Some tools I use:
Awesome! I had some fun implementing a System 6 inspired theme on a recent toy project for creating custom Slack emojis - https://temoji.me (desktop only).
Wish I knew about this framework earlier - would have saved me some time :)
You had me - before clicking - at the url-slug "the-x-files". Loved the content and learned something useful. Thanks for pointing it out. Will be another little tool in my belt.
just set this up on my machine! Thank you so much!
I'd just been bumping into this problem, but hadn't conceptualized such an elegant solution, so kept fumbling around, adding/moving things, futzing around with git way more than I wanted to.
I have a Kindle - something I'd find valuable would be having a digest of "Today's top stories" sent to my kindle's email address as an epub so I can check it out each day. But on Kindle, I think the 3 column layout would be too narrow to read - it makes sense on A4, but not smaller. How do you do your daily sync to ReMarkable?
btw, it looks like if I enter a direct link to an RSS feed it doesn't work (e.g. when testing it for my site, https://alexplescan.com/index.xml results in a blank page, but https://alexplescan.com works well)
> curious how others handle the "too many newsletters" problem
I like to have everything funnelled into my RSS reader, pick a few things that sound interesting each day, and archive the rest. For the getting everything into RSS part, I'm building https://mailgrip.io to help (it gets email newsletters into RSS feeds).