Unfortunately your Kindle needs to be registered to do this, and it's often a phenomenal pain in the ass to get old Kindles to register, if it's possible at all. I've got two old Paperwhites and I can't get either of them to register despite trying for hours and hours with every troubleshooting step I've found.
The preferred AV1 encoder that ships with ffmpeg, SVT-AV1, is faster than any software H.265 encoder now. You can encode 1080p video in real time at preset 6 (the equivalent of 'medium' -- presets are on a scale from 0 to 13) on a $120 desktop CPU.
You don't need to modify the clipboard to do that, news sites were doing it long before the clipboard API existed. It's usually done with CSS, abusing display properties, positioning, font size, etc to make attributions a non-visible but still copied part of the text.
Check out an alternate web client, like https://github.com/spikecodes/libreddit. Even compared to the old design it's much more lightweight and clean, and compared to the redesign it makes 1/4 as many HTTP requests, uses 1/20th the CPU, 1/4 the memory, and 1/2 the bandwidth, doesn't require an account to subscribe to subs, can work as pure static HTML, and doesn't track anything. I have poor Internet and the difference is night and day.
My father has insisted on doing this for over 20 years, but he doesn't know how to do it himself. I expect a password-reset phone call from him every 2 or 3 days and have done since 1998. Just recently he had someone from his bank's IT department call him directly about resetting his password over 500 times.
I'm not sure if he's still doing it but someone put together https://theuserisdrunk.com/ and https://theuserismymom.com/ a few years back... I wonder if you could do something similar here, given the level of absolute predictability that seems to be involved.
I sadly can't put my finger on what's so compelling about this, just that my "oh that person should talk to a UX team lead!" meter just went plink
Reddit and Medium are awful for this. I don't know what they're doing, but every page has a small chance of infinitely looping to max out a CPU core forever, unless you block their ads. I'll feel my laptop heating up and know that some Reddit thread somewhere is to blame.
Valve's new Steam Deck device runs Linux. If it proves popular, that will be a big incentive for developers to improve Linux support for their games, and help jump that hurdle.
How do you feel about the Windows official package manager, winget? I find it a lot more polished and usable than Chocolatey was, and didn't notice much difference compared to apt or dnf, but admittedly my experience is limited and I haven't done much complex with any of the four.
> If you want to allow me to consult it offline, that's very kind and noble. Just put a zip file somewhere I can download.
To play devil's advocate: a majority of web traffic is on phones and tablets now, especially for long-form content where you will frequently see people request a page on a desktop, then request it two minutes later from a phone or tablet where they can read it more comfortably. 99% of mobile users will be happier when a text-heavy site is a PWA that caches itself, rather than a static HTML site that asks them to download a zip file, install an app to work with zip files on their device, unzip it to a folder of hopefully-relevantly-named HTML files, and then browse those, in the process breaking link sharing, link navigation (depending on OS), cross-device reading and referencing of highlights/notes, site search, and so on. Not to mention the limitations imposed on file:/// URIs, like browser extensions not working on them by default, which is a real problem for users relying on them for accessibility (e.g. dyslexia compensation, screen reader integration, stylesheet overrides). A lot of times that won't even be possible on a dedicated reading devices; my ereader will cache PWAs but will not download arbitrary files, if you make your site a PWA I can read it during my commute, if you make it static HTML with a zip file I can't. These are features most users appreciate a lot more than not having to load a 60k JS bundle (current size of React gzipped).