Shortcuts supports x-callback-url, allowing the calling app to receive a response (a callback) when a particular interaction has completed. Documentation for Shortcuts can be found here
The x-callback-url spec was written by Greg Pierce, of Agile Tortoise.The official x-callback-url website introduced a list of (third-party) Apps that support the specification.
Throughout the years, several attempts have been made by members of the community to update / document the list of Apps.One Tap LessAppTalkOpener
I’ve noticed that it can be quite a challenge to find official documentation on the use of x-callback-url for certain iOS Apps. That’s why I decided to gather all information I could find and list it in an Airtable base.
List of Apps with x-callback-url (work in progress)
Feel free to use it as a reference (add to homescreen), share around and/or respond with feedback and suggestions.
Inspired by Siri Shortcuts Apps, a running list of Apps that supports Siri Shortcuts.(maintained …
been listening for years and enjoyed a lot of conversations but he has really just lost the plot of listening to others….anyone else feel the same? I’d rather spend my time listening to more intelligent conversations…..
From their own announcement:
https://www.iheartpodcastunion.org/
We, the podcast producers, editors, researchers, writers, and hosts of iHeartMedia, are thrilled to announce that we are unionizing with the Writers Guild of America, East.
…our adaptability helped the company not just sustain, but thrive during a period of economic uncertainty and social unrest.
iHeartMedia executives recently announced digital audio revenue was up by 77 percent from the year before, as well as the demand for digital advertising.
Unfortunately, those gains have not reached the creators working round-the-clock to keep our audience of more than 30 million monthly listeners actively engaged.
Podcasters, producers and staff have unionized to help address concerns such as:
appropriate compensation and benefits, accountability mechanisms regarding diversity and inclusion efforts and manageable workloads and appropriate staffing for shows.
I mean, it doesn’t have to be that specific. But I’m looking for something that teaches adults who basically had to raise themselves things that they missed out on from not having a responsible parental influence.
Dating advice, financial basics and responsibility, all of those day-to-day things you’re supposed to learn from your parents. Even as far as things such as self-respect and self esteem, which is supposed to be fostered during early childhood.
So I’m basing this off the top post atm about Joe losing his touch - we surely can all see how he’s dropped off in recent years. Used to be such an avid listener and thought he had such interesting convos with people where he was genuinely humble and naive and just curious for knowledge but now he’s a know-it all, anti-vaxxer snowflake. So, what podcasts are out there that are the opposite of the JRE? Or more like what it used to be? Someone just having really interesting guests on their show and having genuinely insightful discussions with them that are also a little bit funny and quirky and yeah. Surely someone out there is doing what Joe does but a whole lot better than him?
I’ve found listening to horror stories helps me sleep. I preferably want one where it’s just someone telling a story and no narration or extra things, just the story.
I also would love it if it was available on Spotify! Thank you!
Title says it all
Mine is Am I the Asshole Pod
I may get downvoted and I understand, but I have been transphobic my entire life. Coming from a blue collar neighborhood with immigrant parents it’s definitely been instilled in me.
However I am open to changing and feel like books have definitely helped me open my perspective up about different topics in the past.
Are there any books you guys recommend to help me get started in understanding? Any other recommendations other than books would be great. Appreciate you all in advance and I’m just looking to understand more.
EDIT - thank you all for your recommendations and kind words. I decided to pick up “This Is How It Always Is” by Laurie Frankel based on one of the recc’s. Thank you all again and looking forward to the novel!!
The title kind of says it all. I’m looking for a book (preferably nonfiction but if a fiction book comes to mind… please feel free to recommend) where a person hits about the 30-40 ages and doesn’t really have much. He or she realizes that he or she is very alone in this world… and they have to make it themselves. Overcoming things like depression and anxiety would be a +1. I’m not really looking for a book about overcoming alcohol or drug addiction, overcoming those things is wonderful but it’s not relatable to my current plot in life. If the character has experienced a family members death… that’d be another +1. As I lost my mom a little over a year ago. I’m just looking for inspirational books where a person hits middle age, doesn’t have much, life has beat him or her up over the years but through hard work, perseverance and a lotta luck… they make it… happily ever after. What book pops into your mind? …
Twilight is not a good book. That does not mean I did not lose my mind over it when I was 12. I’m about to have a month off and want to recapture my preteen feelings of reading Twilight/Vampire Academy/The Mortal Instruments. I’m about to have a month off school and need to not think. Give me a book where I can switch my brain off please!
Who do you consider to be the greatest 19th century author and what is your favorite work of theirs?
It’s always hard to tell what I like exactly about a book but I know what I loathe: incompetence. I hate it when a character is supposedly so smart but keeps doing stupid stuff or just jump to conclusions without much thinking. I once read a book about a detective who was supposed to be the best in the country but turns out he actually did close to nothing to solve the case. It was solved by mere luck and he was wrong the whole time about the culprit (also accused someone just because). That infuriated me. I wish it was parody but it wasn’t.
Anyway, I just discovered the term “Competence porn” and I realized that’s what I actually am looking for. If some of you have watched the show Leverage or the movie Ocean’s Eleven, that’s what I want to find.
I already did some research and I have already read/bought/borrowed the following: - The Martian - Six of Crows - All Sherlock Holmes - All Hercule Poirot - All discworld books (Granny Weatherwax is …
think: cozy cable knit sweaters, tea, sea-side towns, light houses, a haunting or two, maybe a mysterious death, loner feels for the protagonist, small population… something dark and rainy feeling but also cozy?
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lay it on me!
In a lot of open world games, exploration comes down to just collecting 100 pieces of a thing to unlock a skin, or finding a chest with random loot.
I’m looking for games where the rewards are unique and feel important to gameplay. One example would be NFS Most Wanted (the 2012 one), where the cars would be scattered across the map and you’d unlock them by discovering them. Test Drive Unlimited 2 and Forza Horizon 4⁄5 had something similar with finding wrecked cars and restoring them. Another similar examples would be power armour in Fallout 4, or finding gear in the Dark Souls games.
Basically anything where discovery feels actually significant.
I’m on PC. Only one I can think of is Arkham Origins. Also it has to be set around Christmas and shouldn’t just just have one level set during Christmas or something.
Top pics right now. (Which I have already played sadly)
I don’t have a lot of games under my belt, but my favorite gaming experience is essentially the early to mid-level leveling experience of Classic or Vanilla WoW. I’m basically looking for a single player game you believe to be reminiscent of this experience! Just to clarify, the game doesn’t need to have the same visual aesthetic of Classic Wow, although there’s certainly something cozy about it that I can’t find anywhere else. I might be asking for too much but I’ll list out the the certain itches I’m hoping to scratch: 1. It’s mainly the early to mid-game Classic WoW experience that I’m trying to recapture: the experience of traveling from town to town, zone to zone, picking up quests, exploring the world and turning them all in once you’ve knocked them all out. There’s just a coziness to that experience that I’m still trying to find. 2. Varied character customization through, classes, abilities, …
I love the feel of Dark Souls, but I’m way too stressed right now. I need a power fantasy. I don’t want it to be a cakewalk, but nothing I’m going to struggle with.
But mostly I want good weighty, meaty, hack and slash that feels good to play. Leveling up and inventory would be a bonus but not required. Preferably something that looks pretty so I can get some use out of my overly expensive graphics card.
Hi all,
I’m looking for a long, open-world game that I can play for a very long time. Preferably something that has some RPG elements. Examples of stuff that is similar to what I’m looking for are
Fallout 3, New Vegas, 4,
Metro: Exodus
Red Dead Redemption 2
Thanks!