diff --git a/cache.json b/cache.json index de861d0..52589e9 100644 --- a/cache.json +++ b/cache.json @@ -32,6 +32,26 @@ "feedUrl": "https://thenewleafjournal.com/feed", "siteUrl": "https://thenewleafjournal.com", "articles": [ + { + "id": "https://thenewleafjournal.com/?p=21302", + "author": "Nicholas A. Ferrell", + "description": "A goose continues drinking from a puddle in Brooklyn Bridge Park and comes away satisfied... part two...\nPossibly related posts...\n\nThirsty Goose in Brooklyn Bridge Park: Part 1\nObserving a Family of Geese in Brooklyn Bridge Park (and…\nFamily of Geese in Vinegar Hill, Brooklyn\n1883 Opening of the Brooklyn Bridge\nJustin and Justina review 2022 at the NLJ\nBaby Geese in Brooklyn Bridge Park\nA Trip Across Brooklyn's Summit Street Bridge\nOn Haughty Dog Owners in NYC\nJustin and Justina 〜 Convincing a Google Devotee to Try…", + "link": "https://thenewleafjournal.com/thirsty-goose-in-brooklyn-bridge-park-part-2/", + "publishedOn": "2023-09-22T19:19:51.000Z", + "wordCount": 1630, + "title": "Thirsty Goose in Brooklyn Bridge Park: Part 2", + "imageUrl": "https://thenewleafjournal.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/thirsty-goose8.jpg" + }, + { + "id": "https://thenewleafjournal.com/?p=21294", + "author": "Nicholas A. Ferrell", + "description": "A goose drinks from a puddle in Brooklyn Bridge Park... part one...\nPossibly related posts...\n\nThirsty Goose in Brooklyn Bridge Park: Part 2\nObserving a Family of Geese in Brooklyn Bridge Park (and…\nFamily of Geese in Vinegar Hill, Brooklyn\n1883 Opening of the Brooklyn Bridge\nJustin and Justina review 2022 at the NLJ\nBaby Geese in Brooklyn Bridge Park\nA Trip Across Brooklyn's Summit Street Bridge\nOn Haughty Dog Owners in NYC\nNineteenth Century Autumn Dress Trends", + "link": "https://thenewleafjournal.com/thirsty-goose-in-brooklyn-bridge-park-part-1/", + "publishedOn": "2023-09-22T19:18:25.000Z", + "wordCount": 1660, + "title": "Thirsty Goose in Brooklyn Bridge Park: Part 1", + "imageUrl": "https://thenewleafjournal.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/thirsty-goose1.jpg" + }, { "id": "https://thenewleafjournal.com/?p=21287", "author": "Nicholas A. Ferrell", @@ -455,16 +475,6 @@ "wordCount": 21, "title": "I had a minor screen tearing issue on an old netbook (I do not know the exact year but the Windows 8...", "imageUrl": null - }, - { - "id": "https://memos.emucafe.org/m/29", - "author": null, - "description": "I am using an old LibreBooted ThinkPad as a \"server\"... really more as an always-on Syncthing node. After having some issues with GNU Trisquel (probably my fault), I decided to go with Bodhi Linux 7.0 (I prefer to have a GUI). Installation went perfect but I had an issue with the behavior on sleep. By default, the laptop seems to suspend when I close the lid, which causes wi-fi to shut off. Since I want it to be an always-on Syncthing node, I obviously need the wi-fi to stay on when I close the laptop. After fumbling for a solution, I read on a forum that the XFCE power manager works outside of XFCE. That sounded good to me since I use XFCE on my main workstation and I am familiar with its GUI tools. I installed it (no extra dependencies - nice), enabled it, and modified the power settings. It worked perfectly. I mark this issue as solved.\n#linux #BodhiLinux #XFCE", - "link": "https://memos.emucafe.org/m/29", - "publishedOn": "2023-08-24T05:01:00.000Z", - "wordCount": 21, - "title": "I am using an old LibreBooted ThinkPad as a \"server\"... really more as an always-on Syncthing node. ...", - "imageUrl": null } ] }, diff --git a/feed.atom b/feed.atom index 1dd16c4..f6badb2 100644 --- a/feed.atom +++ b/feed.atom @@ -2,10 +2,52 @@ https://nafnlj.github.io/nljfeeds/index.html New Leaf Journal Feeds - 2023-09-22T14:09:50.533Z + 2023-09-22T20:10:53.139Z osmosfeed 1.15.1 + + <![CDATA[Thirsty Goose in Brooklyn Bridge Park: Part 2]]> + https://thenewleafjournal.com/?p=21302 + + 2023-09-22T19:19:51.000Z + + + Nicholas A. Ferrell + + + + <![CDATA[Thirsty Goose in Brooklyn Bridge Park: Part 1]]> + https://thenewleafjournal.com/?p=21294 + + 2023-09-22T19:18:25.000Z + + + Nicholas A. Ferrell + + <![CDATA[By: Carlossnoda]]> https://thenewleafjournal.com/?page_id=20443#comment-2408 @@ -965,15 +1007,4 @@ Points: 24 nafnlj - - <![CDATA[I am using an old LibreBooted ThinkPad as a "server"... really more as an always-on Syncthing node. ...]]> - https://memos.emucafe.org/m/29 - - 2023-08-24T05:01:00.000Z - - - Emu Café Memos - - \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/index.html b/index.html index bb22510..f587830 100644 --- a/index.html +++ b/index.html @@ -15,6 +15,96 @@ +
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    - I am using an old LibreBooted ThinkPad as a "server"... really more as an always-on Syncthing node. ... - -
    - - I am using an old LibreBooted ThinkPad as a "server"... really more as an always-on Syncthing node. After having some issues with GNU Trisquel (probably my fault), I decided to go with Bodhi Linux 7.0 (I prefer to have a GUI). Installation went perfect but I had an issue with the behavior on sleep. By default, the laptop seems to suspend when I close the lid, which causes wi-fi to shut off. Since I want it to be an always-on Syncthing node, I obviously need the wi-fi to stay on when I close the laptop. After fumbling for a solution, I read on a forum that the XFCE power manager works outside of XFCE. That sounded good to me since I use XFCE on my main workstation and I am familiar with its GUI tools. I installed it (no extra dependencies - nice), enabled it, and modified the power settings. It worked perfectly. I mark this issue as solved. -#linux #BodhiLinux #XFCE - -
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