Scraperr is a self-hosted web application that allows users to scrape data from web pages by specifying elements via XPath. Users can submit URLs and the corresponding elements to be scraped, and the results will be displayed in a table.
From the table, users can download an excel sheet of the job’s results, along with an option to rerun the job.
View the docs.
Usual workday is 8 hours, you can fit 3 of those in one day. So We can go to 21 days a week!
You think a phone with 512GB storage and 12gb RAM is lacking? Phones should be way faster and snappier with what resources they have, Android and iOS are just bad in using what they have available
Unlike before, where they were able to access, manage, and transfer files from Android?
Tackle
He could try DynV6 they allow V6 and are free
I think you underestimate how well developed the VA industry is in Japan. A lot of them are famous or use that as a start to become idols, so there’s a lot more training and effort put into it, compared to most other countries
They have servers in different countries as well
Yeah, at least W should have been easy enough. I can understand dodging X, Y and Z. But then why start at B?
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as long as HMD doesn’t allow bootloader unlocking this is DOA
I guess 3/4 of a meter would be unwieldy 😅
Can you ping your domain? How about checking the DNS resolution? What DynDns do you use?
With the bezels shrinking, I feel like 6" is also ok. The phone itself just shouldn’t grow to phablet sizes.
I just hope that there will be some good phones without a notch or punchhole in the near future. There are some out there, but they all have pretty major drawbacks (SoC, Updates, Availability outside China…).
I can recommend the Last Week Tonight Episode about just this topic. At least in the US, there’s basically no difference
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tn7egDQ9lPg
I guess Japans geography allows for a lot more undeveloped regions where wild animal can thrive and live without bothering anyone. Here we mostly have flat land and due to the heavy settling for almost 2000 years there’s little untouched nature left.
Thanks for posting