Does anyone have a shortcut that works YouTube PIP on iOS 15?
prefs:root=PASSWORDS
will open Passwords section in Settings app.
prefs:root=PASSWORDS&search=reddit
will display all passwords containing the term ‘reddit’.
What I’m trying to achieve though is open Passwords and go straight into search field and ready to type without having to define search term.
Is that possible?
I’ll outline my journey with Spotify and Shortcuts. We’ll start from reasonably simple ideas, documenting the obstacles I’ve found as well as workarounds I am aware of. We should end up with an understanding of what I believe you’d need to do to get Shortcuts to play a Spotify playlist.
This was meant to be a followup reply to https://reddit.com/r/shortcuts/comments/ogimak/_/h4kpwg2/?context=1, but quickly expanded enough that I wanted to make it a standalone post instead.
For links to my shortcuts you could use as reference, please see my reply to this post: https://reddit.com/r/shortcuts/comments/ohp2pr/_/h4qe81g/?context=1
YMMV, I am not an expert, my memory is fallible and my understanding incomplete; patches may change the situation at any time.
You could try the following kind of automation, give or take a few steps:
Few months back I made a post here asking for podcast suggestions that could help me go through one of the most stressful time of my life so far, dealing with my mother’s 4th stage brain tumor fight. Sadly,I lost my mom to cancer and she is no more. During this whole time, when I had to sit beside her in the hospital I used to check my previous post and listen to your recommended podcasts. I swear to God, most of the recommended pod casts actually helped me. Listening to a few awful stories from the people around the world made me think that its not just me. Each and everyone of us goes through difficult, harsh, stressful times. That gave me hope that I might be ok one day, eventually.
I used to think these reddit awards and upvote count is really silly and absurd, but I remember sitting alone in the hospital cafe, when somebody here sent a hug-award on my post.I chocked on coffee with tears in my eyes. I got so emotional that the nurses there took me to the ER to check my vitals. …
I’m female/early 20s, and have been working a 9-5 WFH job for the past year. Before march 2020, i had so many new hobbies, courses I was taking, and a bunch of travel plans that all fell through during the pandemic. I’m very lucky to have this job but I’m beginning to feel a bit like this. Now that the world is opening up a bit I’m feeling more ready to think like I did before, and i’m looking for podcasts to make me excited about that and introduce me to relatable, but new feelings.
I miss the spark for travel, learning, new ideas, new experiences, being confident, independent, feeling like the whole world was open, being a young woman out there doing new things, meeting new people, and basically any sights/sounds/smells/feelings of the outside world, and not just my WFH desk.
I’m looking for a podcast that feels like a solo trip, having a bunch of young female friends, a sunny morning, ideas that make me feel like the world is bigger, a coffee on …
Hi everyone,
I work from home in front of my laptop. Usually I’ll have some lo-fi or post instrumental rock playing int he background, but recently I’ve been listening to a relatively new podcast, “Flow State.” I haven’t seen anything in r/podcasts about it, so I wanted to share it here because it’s been really helpful.
Each episode is a little over an hour long. It starts with a brief introduction from the host, followed by 30 minutes of uninterrupted electronic and instrumental music to work or study to. After that, the host returns for five minutes and talks about focus. You’re supposed to use that time to stand up, stretch, maybe go for a walk — basically to take a break. When the five minutes is up, another half hour of music plays, and you can get back to work.
Here’s the link to “Flow State” on Spotify.
Just a note — I’m not affiliated with the podcast in any way. I just discovered it a couple of weeks ago and …
I knew the story was fucked up but the amount of detail given in this podcast is on another level. Part 3 ruined my day it was so distressing
Open Culture attempts to collect in one place educational media available on the Internet. Although their focus is on free courses, audio books, and lectures they also maintain a list of recommended podcasts on topics such as art, music, history, philosophy, and true and imagined stories.
I’m not affiliated with the website in any way; I came across it while I was searching for new podcasts, and thought I would share.
After listening to countless fiction podcasts, I made a list to binge of some that are worth your time. These are high-end immersive fiction podcast with good audio engineering and talented cast. This list has no preference order. All of them are quite “dark”.
-The Left Right Game - Qcode Media (What is at the end of the road?)
- We’re Alive - PodcastOne Productions (Long run series of a Zombie apocolypse in L.A.)
- Red Frontier - Gimlet Media ( An A.I. turnes against its crew during a Mars mission)
- Blackout - Qcode Media (The grid goes down nationwide, creating immediate disorder)
- The Horror of Dolores Roach - Gimlet Media (Ex-convict goes underground in NYC tunnels)
- Sandra - Gimlet Media (At her new job, Helen finds out about the dark intentions of an A.I.)
- Homecoming - Gimlet Media (An experiment goes wrong, a caseworker tries to find the truth)
- Passenger List - Radio Topia (Did flight 702 really crash into the ocean?)
- From Now - Qcode Media …
Like i said in the title, it’s becoming more and more concerning with time. He’s 23, has a very skewed view on women and what women want from men, thinks feminism is against men, a bit of a homophobe, also a conspiracy theories believer, borderline obese and i don’t think he ever had a proper girlfriend. It sucks that i had to describe him like this but it’s pretty much the truth. I want to give him a book that would help him understand where his thinking is flawed and help him get better. Whenever i try to have a conversation with him about something that it’s not ok, he only cherry-picks and understands what he wants from the discussion. I feel like talking to a wall and it’s infuriating and draining.
LATER EDIT: Thank you for the book suggestions. I will go through some of them myself before recommending one to him. I don’t want to do more damage than good. I feel like i need to clarify some things, as i have read all of your comments but it’s easier to respond like this. He’s not …
books with late teenage/early 20s characters that deal with themes of losing out on your youth, or around and about that sort of thing. thank you :) i love this sub
So I turned 19 this month, and I’ve been struggling with an identity crisis. I know I’m still young but I feel this crushing sense of regret, anxiety and helplessness over my wasted youth and the seemingly bleak future. I’m tired of being depressed and stagnant, but I’ve never been able to make a lasting positive change.
I know books can’t cure me or anything, but it helps. Please recommend books that can give me hope and comfort and inspire me to live life to the fullest.
Edit: I’m overwhelmed (in a good way) by this many responses so I’m sorry if I can’t reply to everyone, but I read all the comments and thank you all for the amazing suggestions! Keep them coming, I really appreciate it.
I’ve been slowly losing my mom over the past 9 months to lung cancer and yesterday it was finalized as terminal and hospice is beginning. I don’t think she has more than a month left. I’m already a broken person, but there’s so much more trauma for me to go through so I’m looking for something that can help me stay strong and encourage me to be the best version of myself. I’ve been reading “The Depression Cure” by Stephen Ilardi and really enjoyed that book. It’s almost a self-care guide, but I’ll be navigating this grief mainly alone, so I was hoping you can suggest a book that might help me.
Thank you
Edit: thank you all so much for replying. It honestly put a smile on my face seeing notifications pop up. I’ll try to reply to each and everyone of you later today. Thank You.
Edit 2: I started tearing up from all the support you guys have given. Thank you from the bottom of my heart
It seems like every book about first nations history is written about someone from an outside perspective, like a professor of religion or some other “historian”. I want a book that comes from an insiders perspective, someone with not only knowledge but an understanding as well. Thanks!
Just looking for something that throws you in the deep end rather than something which takes hours to get off the ground involving boring escort style missions and ‘find my lost cat’ type missions.
Open to any genre, the only thing I’ll say I’m not interested in is dark souls.
​
Thanks.
Games that you just get on and grind while you watch a show or listen to music or a podcast.
I really love games that gradually get darker and darker as you learn more about the story. I really enjoy religious cult/general occult themes as well.
Some good examples of this is The Forest, where you >!slowly learn that the monsters are due to experimentation, and you discover a whole underground lab.!< Or The Last Door, an old school point and click mystery game that heavily features occult themes. Subnautica is another good one, in a similar way to The Forest.
Thanks!
pre-COVID, i used to do a lot of walking. I’ve always LOVED the sense of discovery, or being the first person in 300 years to be somewhere. I’ve walked miles through central Russia, Brazil and Canada, in places where there is no building or person in site. Unfortunately, COVID has got in the way of that obsession of mine, and i’ve been needing something to replace it. I’ve played many video games, but as of yet, nothing has come close to emulating it. Minecraft has the sense of being “open” and “vast”, however after playing it for more than 10 years now, it feels like i’ve seen everything it has to offer (with mods). I enjoyed playing Skyrim a few years ago, but it doesn’t have an “true” exploration elements, such as hunting, worrying about wounds or an advanced climbing system. Project zomboid is, and always will be an incredible game for meeting the “realism” of a real world zombie apocalypse, and in …
I have a problem with impulsive game buying, so I want a game that I can replay a lot of times with different results depending on what I do. I definitely do NOT want a “choices matter” type of game, so maybe more along the lines of different stories or paths I can choose to go down with no “wrong” options, just different ones.
I don’t really know how to describe this but I want a game which slowly drip feeds you the story where you start off having no idea what’s going on and then you gradually learn more and more about why things are happening and what’s really at play. Ideally something were the explanation is satisfying and if I went back and played through it again I’d notice all the hints as to what was really happening all along.
A good example of this style of story telling was Horizon Zero Dawn where you just started as a character in a situation you had no understanding of but you slowly learned more and more about what was happening and why things were they way they were.
I generally prefer adventure style games but don’t be afraid to suggest any RPGs that fit this description.