THaNk YoU fOr VoTiNg BlAh BlAh…
aka @JWBananas
aka @JWBananas
I will go slightly out of my way to step on that crunchy looking leaf.
THaNk YoU fOr VoTiNg BlAh BlAh…
Bad bot
Only kbin users are seeing what you see. It looks fine on other Lemmy instances.
Lemmy and kbin do weird things with code blocks. From the source, the post itself clearly only contained backticks. Lemmy sends out marked-up text. kbin escapes it.
curl -i -X GET -H 'Accept: application/activity+json' https://lemmy.cafe/comment/1368187
and when I cry because my parents treated me like the fuck up that I truly am and I am undeserving of love
And then your dad beat you with jumper cables?
Sprint sold off their 2G infrastructure before Y2K.
(you can disable it but you don’t get the space back)
This can certainly be annoying. But if you think about it from a UX perspective, what would happen if you could?
What happens if you disable it, use the space, and then enable it again?
Where does everything go that you placed there?
Does it just shift down? What if it can’t because of other content on the page? Do you just shift it to a new page? What if there is content in the way across multiple pages? Does that all get shifted to a jumbled mess on a new page?
What if you just didn’t let the user enable it again unless the space was cleared? Would that be too confusing for less capable users?
Sometimes UX designers do seemingly dumb things for very smart reasons.
“Room temperature” in this context means “above 0 °C”.
You aren’t going to heat something to 127 °C with an AA battery.
You might find this interesting.
The real benefit with Electron is the whole write-once-run-everywhere goal that Java was supposed to originally achieve, combined with super fast prototyping.
Maybe one day we’ll get a JIT/AOT version of HTML.
Plenty of them?
Be not afraid
Print. At. Your. Local. Library.
Gilbert Gottfried
Clearly it is a Geoff.
As in Jraphics Interchange Format