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It’a close. Isn’t it at 4% market share? That’s higher than Firefox.
It’a close. Isn’t it at 4% market share? That’s higher than Firefox.
If you have to tiptoe around to use it “correctly”, it doesn’t “just work”
Hands him $5
This is awesome! Portable identity management is one of the holy grails of federated services IMO, and this seems like an immediately usable Fediverse-applicable way to do it (as opposed to something like Solid Pods)
Love this game!
I thought Linus didn’t come up with the name Linux
Wow, that’s more than I thought!
I mean his name is “Dr. Disrespect”, they pretty much got what they were there for
I was about to post this exact comic lmao
I find that this is best explained by the four types of documentation theory. Often when you’re starting out, you need a tutorial or how-to guide (or even just an overview of what the purpose and design language of the API is), rather than a reference, which is what nearly all API documentation is.
I’m surprised they aren’t using Matrix, considering it’s a Fediverse group.
In a way it’s like the concept of files and programs from the desktop world. Each type of content would have an agreed-upon structure and meaning, but is capable of being opened in different “apps” to view, edit, etc. In fact, you could literally implement it that way, which also allows you to do weird stuff like download content and save it on your own computer.
I’ve thought about this before, if every website had a data section with the raw data and a UI section that was capable of being swapped out. Like some sort of composable setup. I think it’s a really promising idea and I even think a prototype wouldn’t be too difficult to build. Although I do think that the context of where a post was made is important, and is carried intrinsically with the data in a screenshot.
Why are there no spaces between sentences?
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Ever since I looked up “java download” and had to go through the horrible process on the Oracle site, I decided that they didn’t want me to download Java so I should avoid it, and that has always proved to be a good decision
Your client is interpreting “#1…” as “# 1…” and making it a title