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Original question by @RealCalliopa@lemmy.world

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Original question by @Sauron@europe.pub

Hey guys, i am planning to begin my Journaling journey starting today. Any recomendations? I have already tried DayOne and Journey Didn't like them Particularly. DayOne seems uncool and even though they claim, a little unsafe. Plus i once before lost all my journal entries in DayOne bcoz i didn't save the encryption keys in my GoogleDrive. Journey is Worse (my opinion). They keep on pushing me to buy their paid option which costs 4$ per month. Like WTF. Its just a Journaling app. I am not going to try Penzu because i have heard a lot of bad reviews on how they cheat people and stuff. Finally i landed on DD-DigitalDiary which isn't open source. Which Sucks. But at least isn't costing me like 50$ a month or anything. Its mostly free. But i am looking or something better. More specifically OpenSource, Free (or almost free) and idk, modern & sxy Like when will these huge companies understand. Not everything needs to be VC funded. Next i am launching my VC funded Venture backed Fried Eggs company

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.zip/post/42291691

Good day! I'm looking for is a way of creating rules to intercept, modify, drop, and replace HTTP requests and responses, hopefully even with regex(or similar) capabilities.

The best extension I've found that seems to suit those needs is Requestly. However, it seems like they have some shady practices of bought/bot reviews, like here on AlternativeTo.net, where you can see the review are made by accounts that are created the same day of the review, and never used since. The same pattern can be found on ProductHunt.
Is there perhaps an audit of their Github repo somewhere?

I've also looked at apps like mitmproxy, but I was hoping for a solution that is in-browser.

I know that Firefox and Chromium has the built-in dev tools for this, but this is only applied with the dev tools actively open; I'm looking for a more persistent solution.

Please let me know if this is not the place to ask, and if there are other places I should try and look instead/also.

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Harper is an English grammar checker designed to be just right. I created it after years of dealing with the shortcomings of the competition.

Grammarly was too expensive and too overbearing. Its suggestions lacked context, and were often just plain wrong. Not to mention: it's a privacy nightmare. Everything you write with Grammarly is sent to their servers. Their privacy policy claims they don't sell the data, but that doesn't mean they don't use it to train large language models and god knows what else. Not only that, but the round-trip-time of the network request makes revising your work all the more tedious.

LanguageTool is great, if you have gigabytes of RAM to spare and are willing to download the ~16GB n-gram dataset. Besides the memory requirements, I found LanguageTool too slow: it would take several seconds to lint even a moderate-size document.

That's why I created Harper: it is the grammar checker that fits my needs. Not only does it take milliseconds to lint a document, take less than 1/50th of LanguageTool's memory footprint, but it is also completely private.

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The return of the most influential after-market camera firmware company ever.

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Original question by @iturnedintoanewt@lemmy.world

Hi guys!

Just that...Wondering if there's any easy FOSS photogrammetry software that I could run from the phone. Alternatively, what would be the easiest one to run from my computer to experiment with it?

Thanks!

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