AirWire is a USB-C WiFi 7 client with true dual-band simultaneous operation, delivering real multi-gigabit speeds, extended 6 GHz range, and seamless UniFi onboarding.
@simonbs sentry.io is the first service I tried to add support for alert notifications via webhooks for my side projects. Additionally, there are services I use with my homelab (sonarr, radarr, etc) that do not allow me to map their payload to the one Brrr expects; all I can give is a URL, HTTP method POST or PUT, and any custom HTTP Headers.
@simonbs just downloaded brr and im super excited at how easy, modern, and fast notifications are. I have been trying to set it up as a webhook for several services but without being able to map json to Brr’s intended schema it appears my use case might not fit the intended simplicity?
> be me > no restaurant experience > don’t even know how to cook > decide to open a restaurant anyway > brag about it online > have no concept of food safety > customer eats and gets food poisoning > jump on social media to defend myself > “guys, it’s not my fault that the kitchen has a rat infestation. It's the rats’ fault”
@cerealkella I’ve found ORM’s as a good idea in theory, but they end up only being good for very simple queries and usage. Eventually that productivity increase falls flat when advanced queries are much harder or other things crop up such as being harder to debug
Now that iOS has finally added support for push notifications in PWAs organizations like the National Weather Service should seek to control their own destiny by building a simple web app which offers a timeline and a firehose of notifications about tsunamis, fires, etc, that people in danger can subscribe to without an intermediary service like Twitter.