Books 2022: Missed it by ‘that’ much
Last year’s title:
Books 2021—The Last Year of the Covid
Well…maybe not. …
These were the words I opened last year’s book count. Tempting fate much? Just before Xmas this year I caught a wicked cold… or did I? Ya, it was probably Covid. Or else the wickedest cold with fever I’ve ever had. 3 years of avoidance and then poof. Sigh.
Relevant to this post? Well it means for the first time ever I will be finishing the year with some unfinished books. My brain has been a puddle and I really couldn’t make my way through Greg Bear’s conclusion to his highly philosophical War Dogs series. So Take Back the Sky will have to wait until 2023 to make it onto the list. I also have two Standard Books works-in-progress (The Blithedale Romance and Elmer Gantry) that can’t technically make it to the 2022 count due to fuzz-brain. Instead the last week I have been rereading old stuff who’s fluffiness suited the state of my brain cells. On the upside it gave me three or four extra titles that I probably wouldn’t have read in the usual course of events.
Le List
Books 2022
January (12)
- The Hot Gate: III John Ringo (2011)
Book 3 of Troy Rising – ebook; reread - The Blacktongue Thief Christopher Buehlman (2021)
Book 1 of The Blacktongue Thief – ebook; - On Basilisk Station David Weber (1992)
Book 1 of Honor Harrington – ebook; reread - The Honor of the Queen David Weber (1993)
Book 2 of Honor Harrington – ebook; reread - The Short Victorious War David Weber (1994)
Book 3 of Honor Harrington – ebook; reread - Field of Dishonor David Weber (1994)
Book 4 of Honor Harrington – ebook; reread - Flag in Exile David Weber (1995)
Book 5 of Honor Harrington – ebook; reread - You Sexy Thing Cat Rambo (2022)
– ebook; - Dangerous Liaisons Pierre Choderlos de Laclos (1782)
– ebook; - The Kaiju Preservation Society John Scalzi (2022)
– ebook; from galley - The Stone in the Skull Elizabeth Bear (2017)
Book 1 of The Lotus Kingdoms – ebook; - The Red-Stained Wings Elizabeth Bear (2019)
Book 2 of The Lotus Kingdoms – ebook;
February (10)
- The Origin of Storms Elizabeth Bear (2022)
Book 3 of The Lotus Kingdoms – ebook; from galley - Light From Uncommon Stars Ryka Aoki (2021)
– ebook; - Leviathan Falls James S. A. Corey (2021)
Book 9 of Expanse – ebook; - Death Before Wicket Kerry Greenwood (1999)
Book 10 of Phryne Fisher Mysteries – ebook - The Game Beyond Melissa Scott (1984)
– ebook; reread - All the Seas of the World Guy Gavriel Kay (2022)
– ebook; from galley - All Systems Red Martha Wells (2017)
Book 1 of The Murderbot Diaries – ebook; reread - Artificial Condition Martha Wells (2018)
Book 2 of The Murderbot Diaries – ebook; reread - Rogue Protocol Martha Wells (2018)
Book 3 of The Murderbot Diaries – ebook; reread - Exit Strategy Martha Wells (2018)
Book 4 of The Murderbot Diaries – ebook; reread
March (7)
- Home: Habitat, Range, Niche, Territory Martha Wells (2020)
Book 4.5 of The Murderbot Diaries – ebook; reread - Network Effect Martha Wells (2020)
Book 5 of The Murderbot Diaries – ebook; reread - Fugitive Telemetry Martha Wells (2021)
Book 6 of The Murderbot Diaries – ebook; reread - Last Exit Max Gladstone (2022)
– ebook; from galley - Shards of Earth Adrian Tchaikovsky (2021)
Book 1 of The Final Architecture – ebook; - Foundation’s Edge Isaac Asimov (1982)
Book 4 of Foundation – ebook; reread - Golf Stories P.G. Wodehouse (1922)
– ebook;
April (10)
- Eyes of the Void Adrian Tchaikovsky (2022)
Book 2 of The Final Architecture – ebook; from galley - She Stoops to Conquer Oliver Goldsmith (1773)
– ebook; - The Grief of Stones Katherine Addison (2022)
Book 2 of The Cemeteries of Amalo – ebook; from galley - Night Train to Rigel Timothy Zahn (2005)
Book 1 of Quadrail – ebook; reread - Away with the Fairies Kerry Greenwood (2001)
Book 11 of Phryne Fisher Mysteries – ebook; - Jade Legacy Fonda Lee (2021)
Book 3 of The Green Bone Saga – ebook; - The Library of the Dead T. L. Huchu (2021)
Book 1 of Edinburgh Nights – ebook; - The Phoenix Guards Steven Brust (1991)
Book 1 of The Phoenix Guard – ebook; reread - Our Lady of Mysterious Ailments T. L. Huchu (2022)
Book 2 of Edinburgh Nights – ebook; - Five Hundred Years After Steven Brust (1994)
Book 2 of The Phoenix Guard – ebook; reread
May (20)
- Five Hundred Years After Steven Brust (1994)
Book 2 of The Phoenix Guard – ebook; reread - The Paths of the Dead Steven Brust (2002)
Book 1 of The Viscount of Adrilankha – ebook; reread - The Lord of Castle Black Steven Brust (2002)
Book 2 of The Viscount of Adrilankha – ebook; reread - Sethra Lavode Steven Brust (2003)
Book 3 of The Viscount of Adrilankha – ebook; reread - Jhereg Steven Brust (1983)
Book 1 of Vlad Taltos – ebook; reread - Yendi Steven Brust (1884)
Book 2 of Vlad Taltos – ebook; reread - Teckla Steven Brust (1987)
Book 3 of Vlad Taltos – ebook; reread - Taltos Steven Brust (1988)
Book 4 of Vlad Taltos – ebook; reread - Phoenix Steven Brust (1990)
Book 5 of Vlad Taltos – ebook; reread - Athyra Steven Brust (1993)
Book 6 of Vlad Taltos – ebook; reread - Orca Steven Brust (1996)
Book 7 of Vlad Taltos – ebook; reread - Dragon Steven Brust (1998)
Book 8 of Vlad Taltos – ebook; reread - Issola Steven Brust (2001)
Book 9 of Vlad Taltos – ebook; reread - Dzur Steven Brust (2006)
Book 10 of Vlad Taltos – ebook; reread - Jhegaala Steven Brust (2008)
Book 11 of Vlad Taltos – ebook; reread - Iorich Steven Brust (2010)
Book 12 of Vlad Taltos – ebook; reread - Tiassa Steven Brust (2011)
Book 13 of Vlad Taltos – ebook; reread - Hawk Steven Brust (2014)
Book 14 of Vlad Taltos – ebook; reread - Vallista Steven Brust (2017)
Book 15 of Vlad Taltos – ebook; reread - Six of Crows Leigh Bardugo (2015)
Book 1 of Six of Crows – ebook;
June (17)
- Crooked Kingdom Leigh Bardugo (2016)
Book 2 of Six of Crows – ebook; - Sword of the Lamb M.K. Wren (1981)
Book 1 of The Phoenix Legacy – ebook; reread - Shadow of the Swan M.K. Wren (1981)
Book 2 of The Phoenix Legacy – ebook; reread - House of the Wolf M.K. Wren (1981)
Book 3 of The Phoenix Legacy – ebook; reread - Prince of Fools Mark Lawrence (2014)
Book 1 of The Red Queen’s War – ebook; - The Liar’s Key Mark Lawrence (2015)
Book 2 of The Red Queen’s War – ebook; - The Wheel of Osheim Mark Lawrence (2016)
Book 3 of The Red Queen’s War – ebook; - Sounding Dark Jo Graham (2021)
Book 1 of The Calpurnian Wars – ebook; - Dauntless Jack Campbell (2006)
Book 1 of The Lost Fleet – ebook; reread - Fearless Jack Campbell (2007)
Book 2 of The Lost Fleet – ebook; reread - Courageous Jack Campbell (2007)
Book 3 of The Lost Fleet – ebook; reread - Valiant Jack Campbell (2008)
Book 4 of The Lost Fleet – ebook; reread - Relentless Jack Campbell (2009)
Book 5 of The Lost Fleet – ebook; reread - Victorious Jack Campbell (20010)
Book 6 of The Lost Fleet – ebook; reread - Rabbits Terry Miles (2021)
– ebook; - Scholar L.E. Modesitt (2011)
Book 4 of Imager Portfolio – ebook; reread - Princeps L.E. Modesitt (2012)
Book 5 of Imager Portfolio – ebook; reread
July (12)
- Imager’s Battalion L.E. Modesitt (2013)
Book 6 of Imager Portfolio – ebook; reread - Busy Doing Nothing: 51 days from Japan to Canada Rekka Bellum & Devine Lu Linvega (2021)
– ebook; - Antiagon Fire L.E. Modesitt (2013)
Book 7 of Imager Portfolio – ebook; reread - Regis Rex L.E. Modesitt (2014)
Book 8 of Imager Portfolio – ebook; reread - Madness in Solidar L.E. Modesitt (2015)
Book 9 of Imager Portfolio – ebook; reread - The Thursday Murder Club: a Novel Richard Osman (2020)
Book 1 of The Thursday Murder Club – ebook - Valiant Dust Richard Baker (2017)
Book 1 of Breaker of Empires – ebook; - Restless Lightning Richard Baker (2018)
Book 2 of Breaker of Empires – ebook; - Orders of Battle Marko Kloos (2020)
Book 7 of Frontlines – ebook; - Centers of Gravity Marko Kloos (2022)
Book 2 of Frontlines – ebook; from galley - Treachery’s Tools L.E. Modesitt (2016)
Book 10 of Imager Portfolio – ebook; reread - Scornful Stars Richard Baker (2019)
Book 3 of Breaker of Empires – ebook;
August (13)
- Assassin’s Price L.E. Modesitt (2017)
Book 11 of Imager Portfolio – ebook; reread - Endgame L.E. Modesitt (2019)
Book 12 of Imager Portfolio – ebook; reread - Vic’s Vultures Scott Warren (2016)
Book 1 of Union Earth Privateers – ebook; - The Conscious Lovers Richard Steele (1722)
– ebook; - A Blessing of Unicorns Elizabeth Bear (2020)
Book 2 of Sub-Inspector Ferron Mysteries – ebook; - The Man Who Died Twice Richard Osman (2021)
Book 2 of The Thursday Murder Club – ebook - Murder in Montparnasse Kerry Greenwood (2002)
Book 12 of Phryne Fisher Mysteries – ebook - Trouble and Her Friends Melissa Scott (1994)
– ebook; reread - Imager L.E. Modesitt (2009)
Book 1 of Imager Portfolio – ebook; reread - Imager’s Challenge L.E. Modesitt (2009)
Book 2 of Imager Portfolio – ebook; reread - Imager’s Intrigue L.E. Modesitt (2010)
Book 3 of Imager Portfolio – ebook; reread - Revolt 2100 Robert A. Heinlein (1953)
– ebook; reread - In the House of Aryaman, a Lonely Signal Burns Elizabeth Bear (2017)
Book 1 of Sub-Inspector Ferron Mysteries – ebook;
September (8)
- Tunnel in the Sky Robert A. Heinlein (1955)
– ebook; reread - The Moon is a Harsh Mistress Robert A. Heinlein (1955)
– ebook; reread - The Rolling Stones Robert A. Heinlein (1952)
– ebook; reread - I will Fear No Evil Robert A. Heinlein (1970)
– ebook; reread - Stranger in a Strange Land Robert A. Heinlein (1961)
– ebook; reread - Methuselah’s Children Robert A. Heinlein (1958)
– ebook; reread - Time Enough For Love Robert A. Heinlein (1973)
– ebook; reread - Ancillary Justice Ann Leckie (2013)
Book 1 of Imperial Radch – ebook; reread
October (7)
- Ancillary Sword Ann Leckie (2014)
Book 2 of Imperial Radch – ebook; reread - Ancillary Mercy Ann Leckie (2015)
Book 3 of Imperial Radch – ebook; reread - A Deadly Education Naomi Novik (2022)
Book 3 of Scholomance – ebook; - The Bullet that Missed Richard Osman (2022)
Book 3 of The Thursday Murder Club – ebook - War Dogs Greg Bear (2015)
Book 1 of War Dogs – ebook; reread - The Spare Man Mary Robinette Kowal (2022)
– ebook; - The Lies of Locke Lamora Scott Lynch (2006)
Book 1 of Locke Lamora – ebook; reread
November (8)
- Midnight Riot Ben Aaronovitch (2011)
Book 1 of Rivers of London – ebook; - Killing Titan Greg Bear (2015)
Book 2 of War Dogs – ebook; - Terminal Peace Jim C. Hines (2022)
Book 3 of Janitors of the Post-Apolcalypse – ebook; - The Bayern Agenda Dan Moren (2019)
Book 1 of Galactic Cold War – ebook; - Dance with the Devil Kit Rocha (2022)
Book 3 of Mercenary Librarians – ebook; - The Empress of Salt and Fortune Nghi Vo (2020)
Book 1 of The Singing Hills Cycle – ebook; - Moon Over Soho Ben Aaronovitch (2011)
Book 2 of Rivers of London – ebook; - The Practice Effect David Brin (1984)
– ebook; reread
December (12)
- March Upcountry David Weber & John Ringo (2001)
Book 1 of Empire of Man – ebook; reread - March to the Sea David Weber & John Ringo (2001)
Book 2 of Empire of Man – ebook; reread - March to the Stars David Weber & John Ringo (2002)
Book 3 of Empire of Man – ebook; reread - We Few David Weber & John Ringo (2005)
Book 4 of Empire of Man – ebook; reread - The Atlas Six Olivie Blake (2021)
Book 1 of Atlas – ebook; - The Man Who Sold the Moon Robert A. Heinlein (1950)
– ebook; reread - Orphans of the Sky Robert A. Heinlein (1941)
– ebook; reread - Tiger Burning Bright Marion Zimmer Bradley & Andre Norton & Mercedes Lackey (1995)
– ebook; reread - The Goblin Emperor Katherine Addison (2014)
– ebook; reread - Captain Vorpatril’s Alliance Lois McMaster Bujold (2012)
Book 12 of Miles Vorkosigan – ebook; reread - Old Man’s War John Scalzi (2005)
Book 1 of Old Man’s War – ebook; reread - The Ghost Brigades John Scalzi (2006)
Book 2 of Old Man’s War – ebook; reread
((\
(-.-)
o_(“)(“)
Show me the numbers!
Total read: 136
rereads 84
11.33 books/month
2.6 books/week
.372 books/day
Books by women: 38 (23/52 new books)
Non SF/Fantasy: 9
Oldest 1722 (The Conscious Lovers)
Of Note
These books made a real impression on me in 2022:
- T. L. Huchu’s Edinburgh Nights series —a magically talented youngster on the down and out making her way through the world with her side-hustles.
- The Blacktongue Thief by Christopher Buehlman — classic thief fantasy but I really enjoyed it.
- The Empress of Salt and Fortune by Nghi Vo — a novella where the story of a recently dead queen is told by/to an itinerant monk whose job it is to record history. Looking forward to future books in the series.
- Light From Uncommon Stars by Ryka Aoki — I don’t know what to say. It deserves all the accolades it’s received. It would be a hard sell to anyone based on a synopsis but it does everything it tries to do — supremely well.
Mysteries and Procedurals
I also expanded my foray into non-sf/fantasy by adding in a few more series of mysteries.
- Kerry Greenwood’s Phryne Fischer — I am still plugging my way through these. Fun fluff.
- Richard Osman’s The Thursday Murder Club series — we became big Richard Osman’s fans by watching his unlikely TV show Richard Osman’s House of Games. So when I saw he had written a book, and a murder mystery at that I immediately got it for L. Then I read it and the follow ups. Delightful in that British sort of way.
- Ben Aaronovitch’s Rivers of London series — speaking of British. L had taken Book One of this series from the library and I happened to read the synopsis: “Midnight Riot is what would happen if Harry Potter grew up and joined the Fuzz. It is a hilarious, keenly imagined caper.” Not, as it turns out, a very accurate description but it is funny, very British and the kind of writing that keeps making you go “ooh, that’s clever” Technically fantasy though…
Some Meh
I’d read War Dogs by Greg Bear years ago and remembered being disappointed by its ending. Turns out that’s because it was a book 1 of a series. Who knew? But trying to get through the sequels has been a slog and I think I might have been better off with leaving it alone.
L had wanted to read Mary Robinette Kowal’s latest The Spare Man despite my warning that the Lady Astronaut series was an anomaly for her. I should have taken my own advice. The very epitome of meh. Not bad, but not really my schtick — as I knew it wouldn’t be…
I took a look at another self published author: Scott Warren and the first book in a series: Vic’s Vultures. I won’t condemn it outright and I might give book 2 a go when I am feeling generous but man, oh man this is the kind of situation where you would see a professional editor shine. The book really, really needed a good substantive edit and some serious tightening.
Some Reviews
Speaking of my opinion, I tried some reviewing this year by signing up for NetGalley and then building a sub-site to host my critical pretensions: https://macblaze.ca/books/ Check it out if you are bored — I only managed 13 reviews before life kicked in. Hopefully I will take it up again in 2023.
A Side Note
Busy Doing Nothing: 51 days from Japan to Canada by Rekka Bellum & Devine Lu Linvega is another self-published work I read. I met these two “virtually” back in 2015 and since then they took their 33-foot sailboat down to Mexico, across to Polynesia, up to Japan and back home to Victoria. The book is their story of the long trip home from Japan. A great read that really captures the highs and lows of long-distance cruising (at least as far as I can tell from other reading…I’m not that crazy). We got to meet them in person up in Desolation Sound this spring and they really are a fascinating pair. (https://hundredrabbits.itch.io/busy-doing-nothing)
In Conclusion
I swore I had read more new books and I really would have sworn I read more books by women. But I think all the series rereads I did (e.g. Honor Harrington, Vlad Taltos, The Lost Fleet, The Imager Portfolio, The Empire of Man — that’s almost 50 books there) skewed both of those numbers. But as noted above, if you only count new books I did come close to 50% on women authors.
Why do I care? I don’t particularly. Many, many of the favourite authors from my my youth were (or turned out to be) women. But I think that actually worked against me and I’ve assumed they made up a large chunk of the writers I consume. Turns out all this counting has proven me very, very wrong on that point. I occasionally rebel (in my head) against the real effort towards diversity that sf/fantasy publishers are consciously making these days and a bit of counting goes a long way to proving they’re right and I’m wrong. Thank you Sesame Street‘s The Count for a lesson well taught 🙂
So keep reading, try to ignore the name/spelling/gender/ethnicity or even flavour/politics/online persona etc. of the author and trust the publishers, they actually do know what they are doing (another strike against self-publishing I guess). There is way, way more good stuff out there than bad.
My fellow book counters: Dr. Leslie’s 2022 book and music list and the one, the only, the original, Earl J. Woods’ Books I Read in 2022 .
Links to previous years’ book count posts:
Stop pretending
Stupid Human tricks, December Edition
A recent headline in a newsletter I received.
Drag storytimes are “a simple, positive way to teach acceptance” yet hate groups are targeting them (CBC)
— Booknet News, Booknet Canada
I get why it was phrased that way but I think it would be much more effective (and activating) to change “yet” to “so.”
Drag storytimes are “a simple, positive way to teach acceptance” so hate groups are targeting them.
You can’t effect change until you recognize the resistance to change. FWIW, I think these kind of events are exactly what we as a society should be promoting. Hit ’em where it scares them the most and we’ll all be amazed what we can slip in behind them.
As always, just my 2 cents.
2 Day before Xmas
It’s all relative
Well this is a thing
Happy Sourdough Fifth
December 12, 2017
That’s the day I baked my first loaf, 5 years ago, with sourdough starter I that I had barely got started — and that starter is still going strong. Here’s a post I wrote in January 2018 about the first couple of experiments using that starter. Spoiler: they were mainly duds.
My poor starter has gone though a lot: from being moldy, to almost starving after a months alone; it even made the journey to BC in air-cargo this past spring and I baked a bunch of loaves on board before bringing it home and reuniting it with the stuff that had sat neglected in the fridge for two month. Still, it has been 5 years and I guess the poor thing deserves some recognition on having made it through all that …as well as periods of me not baking much, a pandemic, a switch from white flour to rye flour, and back again—and then back to rye once more. It’s been almost dried, lived as a swampy sludge, underfed, overfed, developed some weird skins and spent a lot of time in the refrigerator beside the silk screen chemicals. But so far it seems it’s pretty impossible to kill.
And it’s made a lot of loaves along the way. Here’s some pics from over the years:
But it doesn’t really matter
The problem is that actually the bacteria/microbes in sourdough just don’t live that long. So really, the whole “old sourdough starter passed down for generations” thing is just a myth. But at least it’s a tasty one. Here’s a link to an article that explains the whole thing: https://www.bbc.com/travel/article/20220711-the-worlds-oldest-sourdough
Addendum
I just found a note in my notebook dated Nov 29, 2017 with the sourdough starter recipe I used. So I guess the whole process was actually started a few weeks earlier than Dec 12.
Ever agree and disagree at the same time?
An Anniversary of sorts
My first blog post ever was over at: moreblaze.blogspot.com. That’s exactly 20 years ago. The 20-year anniversary for macblaze.ca has to wait until 2025. L has since taken over the original platform after I decided I wanted to host my own blog and not have to rely on external services—an unwarranted bit of paranoia as it turns out.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 2002
Hi
Welcome to the Blog…
Hopefully this will house the daily diaries of (B)ruce (L)eslie (A)nd (Z)ak’s (E)lectronic (BLAZE) lives. Come back and visit whenever…—https://moreblaze.blogspot.com/2002/11/hi-welcome-to-blog.html
My last post there was this:https://moreblaze.blogspot.com/2005/11/blog-abandonment.html (https://moreblaze.blogspot.com/2005/11/), I might go back and export all my posts from there and add them in here…for posterity and unity’s sake. And because…why not…?
Markdown & a Pi update
Because I know you care…
Previous updates: December 2021: An Introduction To Dashboards; October 2021: Pi Update; August 2021: What’s Your Pi Doing?
So what’s up with markdown?
Way back in December 2014 (Markdown) I came across this simple markup language called Markdown. Since I wrote in text editors anyway (Word makes me crazy!) it seemed like a good way to add some simple formatting. Fast forward 8 years or so and I am still using it and use it almost exclusively for note-taking and recording (for posterity) things I am doing. (I’ve got a cheat sheet posted for those who are more interested.
These days all my computer set-up and install notes are in Markdown, my yearly books read, and lately, all my ebook and accessibility research have been written in Markdown.
A few weeks back I had one of those “I wonder if…” thoughts and it transformed my world. You perceive, I had a lot of notes and note files going by now and it was getting worse and worse everyday… since I am basically being paid these days to make notes about ebooks and accessibility and I like to give my money’s worth. Frankly it was becoming a big mess of files, folders and disorganized gibberish.
I wondered if there is a way to render all those markdown notes on a simple website? I’ve done it with my notes on GitHub for Standard eBooks but that is a fancy Jekyll installation. And I mean, half the time I am pasting markdown into this WordPress blog and the Jetpack plugin I installed renders it as html so it shouldn’t be that complicated …should it? But a separate WordPress install was just too unwieldy and frankly I have having to log in all the time since WordPress helpfully built in a timer to kick you out after a certain period of time… sigh.
So that disqualifies my first two choices. So time to do a bit of googlin’
Enter MkDocs
— MkDocs is a fast, simple and downright gorgeous static site generator that’s geared towards…
And is it ever. A quick docker install, a bit of reading about how to tweak the interface and voila! A clean, searchable interface that updates every time I hit save.
All organized, neat and tidy and most especially searchable. As you can imagine I am slowly making more and more sites and cleaning up a lot of old notes.
My world has been rocked.
What’s on the Pi these days?
I keep tweaking with things. I did pick up a Pi-400 as a machine to experiment on since I am trying to use the original Pi 4 as a production machine more and more.
A Pi-400 is a 4 GB Pi 4 in a keyboard case. For some reason they are actually available where as all the other Pi models are very hard to get.
The Dashboard Today
I’ve reorganized a bit but the essentials haven’t changed much. Notable new additions are VS Code Server, MeTube, Home Assistant and Snippet Box.
VS Code Server
VS Code Server is one of the code editors I use to write python. Having it on my Pi as a web-based version is occasionally helpful but it is most useful for editing yaml files and configs for the docker containers so I don’t have to mount the Pi as a drive etc.
MeTube
Is a fast and easy YouTube downloader. Paste in the URL and it downloads the video. Great for archiving favourite shows like Taskmaster.
Home Assistant
I bought my first smart bulb. And since I am a cheapo I didn’t buy the expensive Hue that works with Macs, I had to do some hacking to get Siri to recognize it. I will probably do a post later about that whole adventure, but suffice it to say I landed on Home Assistant — which is a missive open source home automation software package with a huge community. All to control one single bulb.
But hey it turns on and off everyday all by itself and even turns on earlier if it’s cloudy outside! W00t!
MkDocs
See above 🙂
Snippet Box
Snippet box may not be long for the (Pi) world… It’s a great app that allows you to store snippets of code that you use fairly frequently but always forget the specifics of.
I was using it to store regex’s but I have a feeling I will replace it with a MkDocs site. We will see I guess…































