<p><iclass="date">2025-02-16 00:00:00 -08:00</i><brclass="ssbr"><ahref="/blog/public_home_server.html">Public Home Server: Introducing and Resolving Issues</a></p>
<p><iclass="date">2025-02-15 00:00:00 -08:00</i><brclass="ssbr"><ahref="/blog/re-html_quiz.html">Re: Which HTML element are you [Quiz]?</a></p>
<p><iclass="date">2025-02-07 00:00:00 -08:00</i><brclass="ssbr"><ahref="/blog/five_link_friday-003.html">Five Link Friday - 003</a></p>
<p><iclass="date">2024-09-03 02:00:00 -07:00</i><brclass="ssbr"><ahref="/blog/re-the_internet_used_to_be_great.html">Re: The Internet Used To Be Great</a></p>
<p><iclass="date">2024-08-31 02:00:00 -07:00</i><brclass="ssbr"><ahref="/blog/re-my_top_10_linux_commands.html">Re: My Top 10 Linux Commands</a></p>
<p><iclass="date">2023-01-01 00:00:00 -08:00</i><brclass="ssbr"><ahref="/blog/mix-bits_in_stereo-028.html">Bits In Stereo on aNONradio.net - 028</a></p>
<h2id="2022">2022</h2>
<p><iclass="date">2022-12-31 19:52:12 -08:00</i><ahref="/blog/mix-open_mic-050.html">Open Mic on aNONradio.net - 050</a></p>
<p><iclass="date">2022-12-26 19:20:07 -08:00</i><ahref="/blog/mix-open_mic-049.html">Open Mic on aNONradio.net - 049</a></p>
<p><iclass="date">2022-12-25 00:00:00 -08:00</i><ahref="/blog/mix-bits_in_stereo-027.html">Bits In Stereo on aNONradio.net</a></p>
<p><iclass="date">2022-12-20 19:38:25 -08:00</i><ahref="/blog/mix-open_mic-048.html">Open Mic on aNONradio.net - 048</a></p>
<p><iclass="date">2022-12-18 00:00:00 -08:00</i><ahref="/blog/mix-bits_in_stereo-026.html">Bits In Stereo on aNONradio.net</a></p>
<p><iclass="date">2022-12-17 20:22:15 -08:00</i><ahref="/blog/mix-open_mic-047.html">Open Mic on aNONradio.net - 047</a></p>
<p><iclass="date">2022-12-04 00:00:00 -08:00</i><ahref="/blog/mix-bits_in_stereo-025.html">Bits In Stereo on aNONradio.net</a></p>
<p><iclass="date">2022-12-02 21:37:24 -08:00</i><ahref="/blog/mix-open_mic-046.html">Open Mic on aNONradio.net - 046</a></p>
<p><iclass="date">2022-11-27 00:00:00 -08:00</i><ahref="/blog/mix-bits_in_stereo-024.html">Bits In Stereo on aNONradio.net</a></p>
<p><iclass="date">2022-11-26 19:25:12 -08:00</i><ahref="/blog/mix-open_mic-045.html">Open Mic on aNONradio.net - 045</a></p>
<p><iclass="date">2022-11-22 20:31:51 -08:00</i><ahref="/blog/mix-open_mic-044.html">Open Mic on aNONradio.net - 044</a></p>
<p><iclass="date">2022-11-20 00:00:00 -08:00</i><ahref="/blog/mix-bits_in_stereo-023.html">Bits In Stereo on aNONradio.net</a></p>
<p><iclass="date">2022-11-16 19:31:54 -08:00</i><ahref="/blog/mix-open_mic-043.html">Open Mic on aNONradio.net - 043</a></p>
<p><iclass="date">2022-11-16 00:00:00 -08:00</i><ahref="/blog/song-out_of_my_mind.html">Song - Out Of My Mind</a></p>
<p><iclass="date">2022-11-13 00:00:00 -08:00</i><ahref="/blog/mix-bits_in_stereo-022.html">Bits In Stereo on aNONradio.net</a></p>
<p><iclass="date">2022-11-06 00:00:00 -08:00</i><ahref="/blog/mix-bits_in_stereo-021.html">Bits In Stereo on aNONradio.net</a></p>
<p><iclass="date">2022-11-04 07:20:00 -07:00</i><ahref="/blog/mix-open_mic-042.html">Open Mic on aNONradio.net - 042</a></p>
<p><iclass="date">2022-10-30 02:00:00 -07:00</i><ahref="/blog/mix-bits_in_stereo-020.html">Bits In Stereo on aNONradio.net</a></p>
<p><iclass="date">2022-10-23 02:00:00 -07:00</i><ahref="/blog/mix-bits_in_stereo-019.html">Bits In Stereo on aNONradio.net</a></p>
<p><iclass="date">2022-10-16 02:00:00 -07:00</i><ahref="/blog/mix-bits_in_stereo-018.html">Bits In Stereo on aNONradio.net</a></p>
<p><iclass="date">2022-10-09 02:00:00 -07:00</i><ahref="/blog/mix-bits_in_stereo-017.html">Bits In Stereo on aNONradio.net</a></p>
<p><iclass="date">2022-10-02 02:00:00 -07:00</i><ahref="/blog/mix-bits_in_stereo-016.html">Bits In Stereo on aNONradio.net</a></p>
<p><iclass="date">2022-10-01 05:00:00 -07:00</i><ahref="/blog/mix-open_mic-041.html">Open Mic on aNONradio.net - 041</a></p>
<p>I have <ahref="https://links.0x212.com/bookmarks/shared?q=%23bbs">a collection of active BBS servers</a> I have come across. I was not online when BBSs were the popular method of socializing, so I really appreciate those who keep them alive.</p>
<p><ahref="https://links.0x212.com/bookmarks/shared?q=%23frontend">A collection of alternative frontends</a> for popular, corporate websites I have come across.</p>
<p><ahref="https://links.0x212.com/bookmarks/shared?q=%23irc">A collection of active irc servers</a> found around the inter-webs, you may find me hopping around these channels.</p>
<p>I love all of these <ahref="https://links.0x212.com/bookmarks/shared?q=%23website-design">website design clubs</a> built around various design challenges, like no javascript or minimal file sizes.</p>
<p>I have been on a static site generator discovery journey, testing many different projects to see which one worked for me. The list below isn’t complete, but they are the projects I looked into the most.</p>
<p>Hugo and Gozer are the two that I spent the most time on, working my site’s content into fitting the requirements of these programs. It is possible that might be why I struggle sticking to most static site generators. I’m spending a lot of time trying to figure out how these projects want to build my site, and I feel less like it is my site. I like it when my site is weird and quirky and kind of broken, those are the types of sites that I like to discover.</p>
<p>I was considering going to back to manually writing all the HTML and RSS XML myself, and that option is still rolling around in my head, but I did come across another site generator to play around with. <ahref="https://pblog.btxx.org/">Pblog</a> is a shell script utilizing <ahref="https://pandoc.org/">Pandoc</a> to convert Markdown files into HTML, like the other SSGs. I had tried writing my own script last year doing exactly this, but I was struggling with the logic and didn’t even know where to start with RSS XML generation. I’m now able to build an ugly personal site closer to what I want, while automating and standardizing the extra stuff like headers, navigation, footers, feed generation, etc.</p>
<p>I was also running into weird bugs with Gozer where it sometimes wouldn’t create a page in one run, but would in the next run, with nothing different between the two runs. I am able to troubleshoot shell scripts much more easily than Go programs.</p>
<p>Of course there are hiccoughs with implementing a new tool, in this case, I am breaking all of the note and blog post URLs yet again. I can understand the argument for maintaining URL history to prevent linkrot, but I personally don’t actually care about that. Nothing lasts forever, everything is ephemeral, and I would rather tinker with my site and break some links, then worry about keeping every URL perfectly captured forever. That said, if I don’t stick with Pblog, then the current state of my site will be closer to it’s future state when I go back to manually writing out the HTML and XML.</p>
<p>You can check out my website source <ahref="https://git.0x212.com/iiogama/homepage">here</a>. And if you would like, you can send me your thoughts to <ahref="mailto:iiogama@0x212.com">my email</a> or <ahref="https://0x212.com/@iiogama">Mastodon</a>.</p>
<headerid="title-block-header">
<pclass="date">2025-02-13 00:00:00 -08:00</p>
<h1class="title">New SSG, Broken Links</h1>
</header>
<p>I have been on a static site generator discovery journey, testing many different projects to see which one worked for me. The list below isn’t complete, but they are the projects I looked into the most.</p>
<p>Hugo and Gozer are the two that I spent the most time on, working my site’s content into fitting the requirements of these programs. It is possible that might be why I struggle sticking to most static site generators. I’m spending a lot of time trying to figure out how these projects want to build my site, and I feel less like it is my site. I like it when my site is weird and quirky and kind of broken, those are the types of sites that I like to discover.</p>
<p>I was considering going to back to manually writing all the HTML and RSS XML myself, and that option is still rolling around in my head, but I did come across another site generator to play around with. <ahref="https://pblog.btxx.org/">Pblog</a> is a shell script utilizing <ahref="https://pandoc.org/">Pandoc</a> to convert Markdown files into HTML, like the other SSGs. I had tried writing my own script last year doing exactly this, but I was struggling with the logic and didn’t even know where to start with RSS XML generation. I’m now able to build an ugly personal site closer to what I want, while automating and standardizing the extra stuff like headers, navigation, footers, feed generation, etc.</p>
<p>I was also running into weird bugs with Gozer where it sometimes wouldn’t create a page in one run, but would in the next run, with nothing different between the two runs. I am able to troubleshoot shell scripts much more easily than Go programs.</p>
<p>Of course there are hiccoughs with implementing a new tool, in this case, I am breaking all of the note and blog post URLs yet again. I can understand the argument for maintaining URL history to prevent linkrot, but I personally don’t actually care about that. Nothing lasts forever, everything is ephemeral, and I would rather tinker with my site and break some links, then worry about keeping every URL perfectly captured forever. That said, if I don’t stick with Pblog, then the current state of my site will be closer to it’s future state when I go back to manually writing out the HTML and XML.</p>
<p>You can check out my website source <ahref="https://git.0x212.com/iiogama/homepage">here</a>. And if you would like, you can send me your thoughts to <ahref="mailto:iiogama@0x212.com">my email</a> or <ahref="https://0x212.com/@iiogama">Mastodon</a>.</p>
<h1class="title">Public Home Server: Introducing and Resolving Issues</h1>
<pclass="date">2025-02-16 00:00:00 -08:00</p>
<h1class="title">Public Home Server: Introducing and Resolving Issues</h1>
</header>
<p>As I have shared before, I have recently set up a server at home to run this website and web services like <ahref="https://0x212.com/@iiogama">Mastodon</a>, <ahref="https://git.0x212.com/iiogama">Gitea</a>, <ahref="https://live.0x212.com">Owncast</a>, Miniflux, Linkding, and other great stuff. I decided to use <ahref="https://cloudron.io">Cloudron</a> for simple server management, because I was struggling to get things up and running myself manually with package managers or compiling the software myself, or auto-magically using Docker, NixOS, etc. And I chose Cloudron over other similar services like <ahref="https://yunohost.org">YunoHost</a> because I have used it before, it is quite stable, and does the thing it sets out to do well. The struggle with manually taking care of hosting issues came from long hours at work getting things set up and troubleshooting, and not having the energy in the evenings or weekends to get stuff set up and troubleshoot.</p>
<h1class="title">Re: Which HTML element are you [Quiz]?</h1>
<pclass="date">2025-02-15 00:00:00 -08:00</p>
</header>
<p>James’ Coffee Blog posted <ahref="https://jamesg.blog/2025/02/13/html-quiz">a fun quiz</a> to help determine which HTML element somebody is based on their personality. Super scientific stuff, here are my results:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>You are the <search> element!</p>
<p>You love finding things on the web and are an expert at using search engines.</p>
<p>Your nested element is <audio>.</p>
<p>You like to think in different modalities and embrace the interactivity of the web.</p>
<p>Resources</p>
<pre><code>[\<search\> on MDN](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Element/search)
[\<audio\> on MDN](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Element/audio)</code></pre>
</blockquote>
<p>I also noticed how James organizes the blog posts, might break all my post links and follow suit.</p>
<headerid="title-block-header">
<pclass="date">2025-02-15 00:00:00 -08:00</p>
<h1class="title">Re: Which HTML element are you [Quiz]?</h1>
</header>
<p>James’ Coffee Blog posted <ahref="https://jamesg.blog/2025/02/13/html-quiz">a fun quiz</a> to help determine which HTML element somebody is based on their personality. Super scientific stuff, here are my results:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>You are the <search> element!</p>
<p>You love finding things on the web and are an expert at using search engines.</p>
<p>Your nested element is <audio>.</p>
<p>You like to think in different modalities and embrace the interactivity of the web.</p>
<p>Resources</p>
<pre><code>[\<search\> on MDN](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Element/search)
[\<audio\> on MDN](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Element/audio)</code></pre>
</blockquote>
<p>I also noticed how James organizes the blog posts, might break all my post links and follow suit.</p>
<h1class="title">Re: My Top 10 Linux Commands</h1>
<pclass="date">2024-08-31 00:00:00 -08:00</p>
</header>
<p>I came across <ahref="https://www.garron.blog/notes/my-top-10-linux-commands.html">this post</a> by Guillermo Garron sharing how to see your most used shell commands. The post says “Linux Commands”, but this will work with any POSIX or POSIX adjacent shell. Just run the following command:</p>
<p>I thought it would be fun and silly to share my results, which were:</p>
<preclass="shell"><code>1 history</code></pre>
<p>The reason why there is only this one command in my top 10 list of most used commands is because I don’t keep that history. My <code>$HISTFILE</code> is set to <code>/dev/null</code>, which helps keep my home folder clean of unnecessary files, and I believe that history is unnecessary. I keep a lot of notes for commands that I need to refer back to later, or I create shell scripts for commands that need to be repeatedly ran. This practice works for me because I feel like I am always starting with a clean slate, while still being able to quickly look up what I need to do with man-pages, my personal notes, or shell scripts.</p>
<p>Give it a try, delete your history!</p>
<headerid="title-block-header">
<pclass="date">2024-08-31 00:00:00 -08:00</p>
<h1class="title">Re: My Top 10 Linux Commands</h1>
</header>
<p>I came across <ahref="https://www.garron.blog/notes/my-top-10-linux-commands.html">this post</a> by Guillermo Garron sharing how to see your most used shell commands. The post says “Linux Commands”, but this will work with any POSIX or POSIX adjacent shell. Just run the following command:</p>
<p>I thought it would be fun and silly to share my results, which were:</p>
<preclass="shell"><code>1 history</code></pre>
<p>The reason why there is only this one command in my top 10 list of most used commands is because I don’t keep that history. My <code>$HISTFILE</code> is set to <code>/dev/null</code>, which helps keep my home folder clean of unnecessary files, and I believe that history is unnecessary. I keep a lot of notes for commands that I need to refer back to later, or I create shell scripts for commands that need to be repeatedly ran. This practice works for me because I feel like I am always starting with a clean slate, while still being able to quickly look up what I need to do with man-pages, my personal notes, or shell scripts.</p>
<h1class="title">Re: Strong Opinions On URL Design</h1>
<pclass="date">2025-03-11 00:00:00 -08:00</p>
<h1class="title">Re: Strong Opinions On URL Design</h1>
</header>
<p>Vale wrote <ahref="https://vale.rocks/posts/strong-opinions-on-url-design">an opinionated blog post</a> on the following list of things to consider when designing a URL.</p>
<h1class="title">Re: The Internet Used To Be Great</h1>
<pclass="date">2024-09-03 00:00:00 -08:00</p>
</header>
<p><ahref="https://manuelmoreale.com/the-internet-used-to-be-great">This post</a> by Manual Moreale gave me a chuckle. It’s the same type of chuckle I get when I read posts in my RSS feeds talking about the death and/or rebirth of RSS.</p>
<headerid="title-block-header">
<pclass="date">2024-09-03 00:00:00 -08:00</p>
<h1class="title">Re: The Internet Used To Be Great</h1>
</header>
<p><ahref="https://manuelmoreale.com/the-internet-used-to-be-great">This post</a> by Manual Moreale gave me a chuckle. It’s the same type of chuckle I get when I read posts in my RSS feeds talking about the death and/or rebirth of RSS.</p>
<p>I created <ahref="/scripts/map.sh">a neat little Bash script</a> and I was so pleased with how the script turned out that I wanted to share it in a blog post, essentially providing the missing comments in the script. I got inspired from <ahref="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hZGKibcKP5M">a recent video</a> by Films By Kris <sup>(Kris with a K)</sup>. The script will output an <ahref="https://openstreetmap.org">OpenStreetMap</a> URL for any address provided.</p>
<p>The address is provided as a string, either piped into the script or all arguments are combined into a string. The string is sent as a query request to OpenStreetMaps, using their <ahref="https://nominatim.org/">Nominatim</a> API. OpenStreetMaps will return JSON data about the address, which the script will use to construct a URL linking to a map for the address, returned as standard output. There is no validation check with the address provided, so non-addresses can be used, but the script will fail if the address provided does not return JSON data.</p>
<p><code>curl</code> and <code>jq</code> are required for the script, <code>curl</code> is used to send the query and <code>jq</code> is used to parse the JSON that is returned from OpenStreetMaps. The function below checks to see if the programs are installed and exits with an error when anything is missing, listing the missing programs.</p>
<pre>command_check() {
local MISSING=()
for cmd in "$@"; do
local MISSING=()
for cmd in "$@"; do
if ! command -v "$cmd" >/dev/null 2>&1; then
<p>The address can be provided as standard input, either piped or provided as an argument. There is no error checking to confirm the string provided in a valid address, the API will return no data which will cause the JSON validation check to fail and exit with an error. If no data is piped and no arguments are given, then the script will ask for an address with user input. The input is replaces spaces with the URL encoded form to help curl with the request.</p>
if ! jq empty <<<"$LOCATION_JSON" 2>/dev/null; then
echo "Error: Something wrong, invalid JSON for location query." >&apm;2
exit 1
fi</pre>
<p>The <code>coordinate</code> function is used to pull the latitude and longitude coordinates from the JSON data, which it assigns to variables that are ultimately used in the final OpenStreetMap URL for a map with a marker pointing to the location.</p></p>
<p>This script can be plugged into different configurations. I created the following little function in my main menu script (which will be shared another day). This function will ask me for an address with rofi and then copies the URL to the clipboard, and asks to open it.</p>
<h1class="title">Ten Pointless Facts About Me</h1>
<pclass="date">2025-04-24 00:00:00 -08:00</p>
<h1class="title">Ten Pointless Facts About Me</h1>
</header>
<p>Historically, I haven't stuck with maintaining a blog long enough to particpate in most blogging challenges (check out my list of discarded personal website domains on <ahref="/about/">my about page</a>), but I am sticking with this one, so here we are. This blogging challenge starts with <ahref="https://forkingmad.blog/ten-pointless-facts-about-me/">Forking Mad</a>, but I first learned of it from <ahref="https://thomasrigby.com/posts/ten-pointless-facts-about-me/">Thomas Rigby</a>.</p>
<p>A collection of active BBS sites I’ve come across. I was not online when BBSs were the popular method of socializing, so I really appreciate those who keep them alive. I also have <ahref="/notes/pubnixes.html">a list of public unix servers</a> that I’ve come across.</p>
<p>This section is deprecated, expect these links to disappear in the next few weeks. <ahref="/blog/website_changes-01.html">This blog post</a> shares more details regarding this change.</p>
2025-01-18T08:57:49-08:00 Decided to explore #twtxt more and just finished creating a shell script that will cross-post to Mastodon using toot and write to my twtxt file found at https://iiogama.0x212.com/twtxt. And this is my second live test (lol).
2025-01-18T09:15:13-08:00 Just changed by twtxt file to include the .txt extension. #testingInProd
2025-01-18T11:40:29-08:00 So many things to learn, so little time...
2025-01-18T12:44:17-08:00 I've been using Floccus to sync bookmarks since reading Solene's write-up, and it is the best solution I have ever used. Highly recommend it. https://dataswamp.org/~solene/2024-11-02-selfhosted-bookmark-sync.html
2025-01-18T17:44:32-08:00 Finished watching Dandadan and it's easily added to my top-10 favorite animes. Thankfully there is a season two coming out. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt30217403/
2025-01-20T08:38:39-08:00 I'm turning off the ActivityPub feed for my Owncast site (https://live.0x212.com). I realized it's silly and redundant to have it while running a Mastodon instance.
2025-01-22T19:16:18-08:00 In the first place God made idiots. This was for practice. Then he made school boards. - Mark Twain, Following The Equator: A Journey Around The World #quotes
2025-01-25T11:08:49-08:00 Recently learned about and started playing around with the static site generator gozer, and I think I like it more than hugo. It builds the pages much faster and I prefer how it differentiates between blog posts and regular pages, which I feel like I fight with a lot using hugo. This may break every blog post URL, lawls
Check it out!
https://git.sr.ht/~dvko/gozer
2025-01-26T10:15:06-08:00 Welp, switched my website over to using gozer. Changed a bunch of page links in the switch, but easily changed the source code to keep my RSS feed link the same.
2025-01-29T18:25:38-08:00 Everybody wants to save the Earth; nobody wants to to help Mom do the dishes. - PJ ORourke, All The Trouble In The World #quotes
2025-02-04T17:47:05-08:00 Storming quite hard outside right now. If this site goes down, then I have lost power, lol #homeHostingHazards
2025-02-05T19:01:53-08:00 Your wounds are not your fault, but your healing is your responsibility - unknown #quotes
2025-02-10T07:37:21-08:00 Gozer is a nice static site generator, but I don't think I'm going to stick with it. I have messed around with so many different ssg programs, and I think I'm just going to go back to manually writing the html myself. I want my site to be mine and not changed to fit the requirements of an ssg. I'll probably regret this in a few weeks...
2025-02-16T00:44:03-08:00 Here's a new song I made: https://iiogama.0x212.com/songs/135-7A-iiogama-breathe.wav
Is my stuff #BonkWave?
2025-02-23T20:15:45-08:00 I am usually fine when I get blocked from accessing a website because it thinks I am a bot, I often think I am doing something right. But it is certainly frustrating when I get blocked from trying to log in to delete my account.
2025-02-26T16:15:00-08:00 This is a joke product, right? It’s almost €100 for a box cutter…
I follow a blog and they shared how excited they were waiting for two of these orders to arrive, am I missing something here? https://www.studioneat.com/products/keen
2025-03-24T21:05:00-08:00 Recorded a new mix, and while there are definitely some rough transitions, it still turned out pretty good. Even God by Lum!X & Jayover is my latest, most favorite song that will be getting played a lot in the future. https://iiogama.0x212.com/music/mix-everything_is_sine-001.html
2025-03-25T18:14:00-08:00 TIL that true and false are actual commands on linux. They live in /sbin and have manpages. I don't know why it took me this long to learn this.
2025-03-25T20:03:17-07:00 Yousuke Yukimatsu is such an incredible DJ, I love how his sets are so eclectic
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T1tcUfUhR5u
#np #nowPlaying #mastoMusic
2025-03-29T17:20:51-07:00 I made a song this week, check it out here:
https://iiogama.0x212.com/music/song-droptop.html
I am always open to feedback, preferably the constructive variety.
2025-03-29T18:12:52-07:00 Just recently discovered the face 2 face format of DJing and I am all for it. It's similar to the old school style of DJing where DJs had to mix in and out of each other to keep the music going. Now we just need to stop pausing the music to introduce the next DJ at the top of the hour...
Here's a nice F2F mix: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GodKcWjt-CE
#np #nowPlaying #mastoMusic
2025-04-07T09:00:00-07:00 When did it become acceptable to play videos on your phone at full volume in public? I’m in a waiting room and two people on two sides of the room are playing loud, obnoxious videos.
2025-05-10T15:57:27-07:00 About to deploy some breaking changes to my website... again... I'm using Faircamp to build the music portion of my website.
2025-05-11T10:42:00-07:00 Made a new song and got Faircamp mostly set up. It's been a productive weekend. Check out the song here: https://iiogama.0x212.com/music/songs/15/ #notBonkwave
2025-05-24T18:33:28-07:00 Went on a nice bike ride today and had a nice view of the Sutter Buttes. https://iiogama.0x212.com/photos/20250524-bike_ride.jpg
2025-07-19T20:59:05-07:00 Learn Linux TV reaching 1 million subscribers can only mean that 2026 will the the year of the Linux desktop. https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/7PgMt-3xkw8
2025-08-15T22:42:44-07:00 DAE remember 13375p34|<
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