Oh maybe so… I’ve had it installed forever so didn’t notice. That’s sad. Sorry OP, not sure what to recommend…
If you have DRM-free ePubs or can convert your library to ePub (e.g. with calibre), the Marvin app lets you set a startup password and/or password protect individual books. The startup password supports touch/face id, but not sure about the per-book one.
Six years is recent enough for decent virtualization support at the CPU level, so it’ll probably run within 5 to 10% of the “native” performance you could get with Boot Camp. If you have enough RAM to give the VM a decent amount it should be fine.
This personal inventory project hasn’t been updated in a couple years, but looks Ike it could work for what you’re describing.
There’s a “docs team” that hangs out on the NixOS discourse that I’m sure would be happy to have you. They have meeting every couple weeks if you want to say hi & find out what would be a good way to start contributing.
Do you mean & by itself, or as part of a thing like &
? The latter is an HTML “character reference,” which is used to represent characters that clash with bits of HTML syntax. For example, HTML tags are wrapped in “angle brackets”, also known as the less-than and greater-than symbols, so if you want to write those symbols, you need to use <
and >
instead.
All this encoding crap is supposed to happen behind the scenes, but some software forgets to handle them correctly, and the character references “peek through” and get rendered as plain text.
Edit: this post is a good example of software being weird. It automatically converted the code for the greater than symbol into the symbol itself, but not the others.
I usually go with characters from the Discworld series. So far I’ve had a Rincewind, Ridcully, Twoflower, Weatherwax, Ponder, Librarian, Luggage, and Hex, plus a router called “The Clacks”. Really ought to get Vimes and crew into the mix, now that I think of it… maybe the next one will be Angua or Carrot.
@SupremeFuzzler
@lemmy.world