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That is still source code, obfuscated but still source code.
That is still source code, obfuscated but still source code.
Counting in lines of code is the most stupid metric.
It works quite fine, use it daily. Well, XMMS2 to be pedantic.
Just some shellscripts bound to windows-keys to pause/play and load new files.
The question is whether x86 is even relevant anymore
Also RISC-V, though that is probably a few years away at least.
It is still just a “trust us” deal. They say they have deleted it, and all you can do is trust them. They could possibly get into legal troubles if it was shown they were lying, but that could be easily avoided as well.
GDPR is ok, but much of it is based on good actors doing what they should.
…and when they don’t pay Discord under the table. Discord wouldn’t be unique if this was the case either.
I don’t know where you are getting those numbers from. Most put chrome in around 78%, edge at 10% and then everything else. And all chrome re-skins are just that, google still controls it. There is a reason one of the biggest software companies in the world just gave up their own browser engine and runs a competitor’s with some face paint.
Google are in a far better position to push something like this through than Microsoft ever where, due to their near monopoly on searches. Any site not using it would be more or less dead. Just going from number 1 to 2 on a google search can mean a huge drop in traffic, and then imagine not even being on it at all.
now it is mostly written for web browsers (between which there are no longer any significant differences in terms of standards compatibility).
At this point I think it is just a matter of time until Google (most likely due to their near monopoly with Chrome), will push for some new standard that they own and control and must be used everywhere. For some handwaving combination of security and protect the kids, etc. And google are in a great position to make it happen, don’t support it? Oh noes, your site is no longer listed in google searches.
And that will be the end of the open web, you can only use one browser that totally controls what you can and cannot do. Ad blocking is just the start, saving websites or images? Nah. We don’t allow that. Copy the url? No, you need to use this share button that has embedded tracking links in it, etc.
It also means that they can freeze separately
Pretty good summary of Microsoft’s “innovations” the last decade or so
Just the ads, and you can’t turn them off. Ever.
Everyone has a test enviroment, some are lucky to have a separate production enviroment
Also bluetooth fucking sucks for lack of a better phrase.
9/10 times it connects fine, but then every now and then it just refuses. “What? No I don’t exist” and then you have to either restart bluetooth and/or the device, and then it magically works again.
Also, I quite often get stuttering with it. Not sure if it is my phone or headphones or both at fault, but I would like having an audio jack when I am sitting at the desk
I got super tired of google a few months ago. “Ah, you searched for these terms. But I am going to ignore that and instead show you results for these diffetent ones, because fu.”
So I started using bing instead, I wouldn’t say it is worse. Just differently bad. Some search things are much worse, some are much better.
Quite annoying how they keep pushing for “AI” all the time though, so might go back to google soon anyway.
For every year that passes Silicon Valley slides further and further from comedy to documentary.
Or maybe it is a feeble attempt to annoy people that sign up with foo+service@somewhere.com
and then sort it into different inboxes (of course you can filter on other things but + is built into gmail). You can also use it to see who sold your info when you get spam on that adress.
I think it has the hallmarks of a classic hype cycle.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gartner_hype_cycle
We are probably at around the peak of the hype cycle now. I am preparing the popcorns for when the next phase hits.
I seem to be at around 100 already, though some of those are probably already dead or moved to another instance.
But the easier it is to migrate the more people will do it, if that is the goal.
That is great, but it should ideally be built into Lemmy itself and not an external script that may or may not steal your credentials.
Just two buttons in the settings “Export User Data” and “Import User Data” would be enough.
If they implement import & export subscriptions it would help a lot to move
And if it succesful, or at least passenger doesn’t boycott them over it, it is just a question of time until other airlines adds it as well