(Think of it as a miniature version of the idea dashboard from my previous post.) Centralizing your ideas for future blog posts: The Blog Post Tracker makes it easy to enter and access all your topic ideas in one convenient location - a handy tool, since important ideas can quickly disappear if they aren’t written down regularly.More importantly, you can enter start dates and deadlines on the mind map to keep your blog posts on schedule. This helps you avoid inadvertently over-emphasizing some topics while ignoring others.
Planning and scheduling guidance for your upcoming blog content: The Blog Post Tracker mind map functions as an editorial calendar, displaying post ideas that are in progress, as well as those planned for the future, in the context of your previously published posts.
In a tracker such as this, you can include links that permit you to access original text and graphic files for future recycling and reformatting (as described in Arnie Kuenn’s Create Great Content: How to Get More from It by Repurposing). Keeping track of previously published blog content: Every blogger needs an easy way to track and access previous blog posts to note blog post popularity and comments.and of course other libraries and projects.My three-step Tracker helps you streamline your content marketing process by: ncspot cross-platform ncurses Spotify client written in Rust, using librespot.Psst is using HTTPS-based CDN audio file retrieval, similar to the official Web client or librespot-java, instead of the channel-based approach in librespot.Psst is completely synchronous, without tokio or other async runtime, although it will probably change in the future.Spotify Connect (remote control) is not supported yet.
Most of psst-core is directly inspired by the ideas and code of librespot, although with a few differences:
Cache of various things is stored locally, and can be deleted at any time. Psst connects only to the official Spotify servers, and does not call home.