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Posts
5
Comments
635
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Me in Germany:

    uuuh… fuck

  • A while later I had the song in my mind and couldn't figure out what it was from, trying to remember. Until eventually I stumbled over it again.

  • Why did you post a screenshot instead of posting/quoting the text?

    Text would have been more accessible and more discoverable.

  • It all depends on context. The Firefox logo is good and fine as a brand logo you can put on the product website, big enough, or the about dialog. But as an application icon I dislike it. I would prefer a simpler, more recognizable, flat-colored version.

  • The Ice Guy and His Cool Female Colleague

    The eye movement animation in it is unique and an exceptional stylistic, visual choice.

    Overall charming, heartwarming, good.

    webp teaser

    https://anidb.net/anime/17473

  • If you - rather than the instance as a whole, and for other reasons - are the target of defederation circumventing that would be sockpuppeting.

    If your instance was defederated for reasons unrelated to your behavior and content, then no - you're simply creating an account on their instance.

  • Index categories are blog, docs, magazines. Have you considered indexing source code websites?

    I thought I would remember a second one, but I can't recall right now.

    Subpaths on GitHub and GitLab would be a similar fashion but would require more specific filters - unless they are projects hosted on dedicated instances.

    Project issue tickets may also be very relevant to developer searches!?

  • I think the main issue as well as my main question is around scope.

    You say targets we developers, but the current index is quite narrow. So will you accept significant expansion of that, as long as it may be relevant to Web developers? Where would you draw lines on mixed c content or technologies?

    ASP.NET docs is definitely docs for web developers. But maybe not what you had in mind. Would that apply? The docs are h hosted on a platform with a lot of other docs of the dotnet space. Some may be relevant to "Web developers", others not. And the line is subjective and dynamic.

    My website has some technological development resources and blog posts. But also very different things. Would that fit into scope or not?

    How narrow out broad would you make the index?

    I guess it's an index for search, so noise shouldn't be a problem as long as there are gains through/of quality content.

  • From their description:

    0:46 Rebel Moon - Part One: A Child of Fire — Zack Snyder
    \ 3:32 1984 — Diana Ringo
    \ 4:58 Poor Things — Yorgos Lanthimos
    \ 6:18 Jung_E — Yeon Sang-ho
    \ 8:11 65 — Scott Beck, Bryan Woods
    \ 10:01 The Creator — Gareth Edwards
    \ 12:25 Infinity Pool — Brandon Cronenberg
    \ 14:35 Awareness — Daniel Benmayor
    \ 16:40 57 Seconds — Rusty Cundieff
    \ 18:37 They Cloned Tyrone — Juel Taylor
    \ 21:02 The Wandering Earth 2 — Frant Gwo
    \ 22:47 The Mill — Sean King O'Grady
    \ 26:16 Foe — Garth Davis
    \ 26:23 Simulant — April Mullen
    \ 28:32 The Pod Generation — Sophie Barthes
    \ 30:57 Asteroid City — Wes Anderson

  • JavaScript itself provides the functionality jQuery became popular for. So no. Check the standard lib first before considering helper libs.

  • "no warranty" is very different from "expect bugs and breakage"

    It tells me they're not confident in or trying for stability. Which means I have to expect issues and fix up time requirements. Which I'm not willing to invest regularly.

  • Looks like a video game.

    From how it looks I assume the "boost" is an AI filter?

    Smearing/Smudging was obvious when you looked for it, as well as artifacts on edges on movement.

    Do you see more than with your eyes? I doubt it. Otherwise it could've been interesting as a live viewing aid.

    Seems like it's application would be very niche and situational. And only if you're willing to accept visual artifacts (rather than having a "truthful"/quality as possible video.

  • Your first link:

    42 million user IDs and phone numbers for a third-party version of Telegram were exposed online without a password. The accounts belong to users in Iran, where the official Telegram app is blocked.

    How is that a state exploit of Telegram? It's not even about Telegram. It's a third party app.

  • The Wadsworth Constant is an axiom which states that the first 30% of any video can be skipped because it contains no worthwhile or interesting information.

    • ⚠️ Expect bugs and breaking changes.
    • ⚠️ Do not use the app as the only way to store your photos and videos.

    Well that's not very confidence-inducing…

  • It shows the central content of the site.

    No consent is automatically given or anything like that.

  • Commenter specifically talked about gog and itch. Other commenter then replied you wouldn't own it [there].

    The comment chain specifically moved away from "general trend".

  • GDPR:

    These types of infringements could result in a fine of up to €20 million, or 4% of the firm’s worldwide annual revenue from the preceding financial year, whichever amount is higher.

    4% can be a lot in absolute numbers for these massive corporations. But it's such a low percentage that it could indeed be included in operational cost and then be ignored.

  • Tiny 320p video embed with fullscreen-ability disabled. Why?