oh I see, it's a google thing: developers.google.com/web/fu…
yeah I'm with @adactio on this. this is a great way to put yourself into the mindset of a native app developer, but is *far* from the only way to make a good PWA experience.
IndieWebCamp Amsterdam day 1 was amazing! Lots of great discussions, and as usual, I end the day with so many more ideas for what I want to create for my website next.
Tomorrow's challenge will be to figure out which I can accomplish in a day, and then do that.
Yes! That's gonna be a huge upgrade! I was using a 6S until last year, I'm on the XS now so I can't really justify upgrading again even tho I kinda want to!
The things people carry on their bikes in Amsterdam never cease to amaze me. In just 15 minutes at this cafe I've seen people carrying: a guitar, children, a rug, grocery bags, a suitcase, two large dogs, a bouquet, four cases of wine. I love how absolutely normal it is too.
It was the Waveshare "HAT" version for the Pi Zero. The only thing I didn't like about it is that the whole contraption ends up being almost an inch thick. I'm going to try it again using an esp32-e-paper combo device that's as thin as just one board!
I haven't published the actual code I used, but it's all based on the examples from Waveshare anyway: github.com/waveshare/e-Paper
The real work was in gathering the data in the first place, then it's a matter of drawing rectangles on the screen.