I had a different purpose for my notes, so I made a webpage with a filter by rating. It’s decoupled from video files, but I only keep a few video files anyway.
I think it has a narrower scope, a standardized way to access data for applications which are simply delivered over Internet. As an example: "I want to have a diary editor, but I don’t want to download and install a local app, and neither do I want some external server to access my diary text". Then you get the running code as a PWA, but the data never leaves your computer (or other trusted storage).
I dived deeper and found the full results of the eWayBW test and a summary. So far I don’t see there why the test was considered a failure. It’s all in German of course.
When asking my first open question I did expect you to say something about ethics of buying on Amazon. I didn’t expect, however, that Amazon doesn’t sell mp3 in Canada. I’m sorry about the licensing bullshit leading to this.
I avoid Amazon in everything bad they’re doing. But they do the right thing with mp3 music, and I support that in the hopes that more ethical companies will see the truth and start selling it too.
Could you recommend a language with a sane handling of 64b-NaN-to-32b-int conversion?