What free things online should everyone take advantage of?
What free things online should everyone take advantage of?
What free things online should everyone take advantage of?
Every time you see a Flock license plate reader, add it to the map.
They look like this:
It only costs a bit of your time 😊
As far as what I understand you are saying..
these are free solar panels and cameras?
I read through the website, but I don’t understand how this is helpful. Is it so that people can avoid driving past them, changing their route each time one is added?
Ad blockers
For Safari on macOS, iOS I recommend 1Blocker.
Pi-hole and Vance(YouTube ad blocker.) I can't watch YouTube with ads now.
MIT Open Courseware
I was looking for an old show I saw back in 2000's to see if any streaming platforms had it, low and behold someone had archived the VHS version of the show! The quality obviously wasn't HD but it was good enough to still watch and reminisce.
Project Gutenberg: https://www.gutenberg.org/
LibreVox (if audio books are more your thing):
Anna’s Archive
The services of your local library. Sign up and use them, and get your friends & family on too because the more regular users and the more people aware of their services, the harder they are for politicians to take away or slash the budget of.
Common services offered:
I tried this a few days ago, but Overdrive only had 2 'copies' of the 30+ year old novel I wanted and the waitlist was 10 weeks so I added another "Fuck capitalism for..." to my list.
Mullvad’s DoH service and Leta search proxy are free. You don’t need to have a VPN subscription to use them.
Can you break these two down for me please?
DNS over HTTPS (DoH), which is Domain Name Service over Secure HyperText Transfer Protocol. HTTP is the technology the Web runs on. The S in HTTPS is the secured version of HTTP, it’s encrypted using TLS (originally was SSL, Secure Sockets Layer), Transport Layer Security. DNS translates site names (e.g., www.google.com) into an IP (Internet Protocol) address (e.g., 8.8.8.8). DNS is an unencrypted protocol like HTTP. Adding in the Security component is somewhat tricky, but DoH is one of the ways, it just piggy backs on a tried and true secure transport technology that powers the web today.
The reason you would want to use DoH is to secure the domains you are accessing from (1) being intercepted and/or altered, e.g., someone poisoning the response and giving you a bad IP address for any number of reasons, and (2) snoops such as the WiFi provider you’re connected to or the Internet Service Provider (ISP) or cellular provider, or anyone else watching the unencrypted traffic.
If I remember correctly, Leta search proxy is the anonymized search proxy from Mullvad. Users connect and do internet searches, Leta will search various engines and cache the results, anonymized, for some time (days I think?) and any users who perform the same search will receive the cached results from the other users previous searches.
I could be wrong on some or all of that.
The Pirate Bay ;)
I should take advantage of this tread
not that useful but cute: https://http.cat/ and https://http.dog/ give cute pictures to http error codes like 404: file not found or (the better one) 418: im a teapod
When i dont know what an errer code means i often put http.gat/{errorcode} and then i am pleased because of insight and cat
Rss feeds.
Harvard just released a free civics course. I've been looking into starting that.
Not really „free“ but „mostly free“: Each week you can get a different game from the Epic game store
I keep forgetting about that
Global communication.
Infinite knowledge.
Can we apply some of both of those to narrow down to a few recommendations? 😁
https://theanarchistlibrary.org/
just these 6 have more info than any human can ever consume:
https://thephilosophicalsalon.com/
https://www.poetryfoundation.org/
All the wikis
https://www.susanblackmore.uk/
https://www.technologyreview.com/
https://mediabiasfactcheck.com/
http://www.davidbordwell.net/blog/2007/05/27/intensified-continuity-revisited/ (havent been here in a while, not sure what its like now)
These are some of my bookmarks I put up. Theres a lot lot more and I'll to get back and add more. Many people have made many such lists. Often much better
The piracy mega thread.
Linux, torrents, youtube (if you use a account-less frontend), Wikipedia.
Is anyone aware of a third-party service for tracking YouTube watch history across devices? That's the missing piece keeping me from switching
Your question’s answer is encapsulated to a high degree here:
Not everyone likes the way these images are built, but the liinuxserver.io containers are so easy to use. You can replace so many cloud services using these, I've replaced:
Plus I've setup some awesome new stuff like a website for one of my collectives and a few things to automate server maintenance.
You need somewhere to host your services (I'm using an old PC) and a little linux experience, but it's absolutely worth giving it a crack. I might work in the industry but I learnt more making my little server than I ever did on the job.
Been using this list of free websites and resources for a while:
My local library uses CloudLibrary, which doesn’t actually support ebook readers. It forces you to install an app and read from your phone. I literally have a card in a neighboring town, just to have Libby access on my Kobo e-reader.
Every time I go in to my local library, I make a point of mentioning that CloudLibrary doesn’t work on e-readers, in the hopes that they’ll consider switching to Libby instead.
Kanopy is a good one, great way to watch free movies. Lots of classics as well as some newer stuff.