

the main thing with pocket and services like it is that it saves and syncs entire pages. like a local internet archive.
the main thing with pocket and services like it is that it saves and syncs entire pages. like a local internet archive.
code has been open for about 10 years. it was a binary blob to begin with but nowadays it’s all here
[…] the way people save and consume content on the web has evolved, so we’re channeling our resources into projects that better match browsing habits today.
…in what way?
they added recommendations. that’s when i stopped using it. i wanted a way to bookmark entire sites at once and then they started scraping the stuff i saved. then moz bought it and now the recommendation feature is the only thing they’re keeping around.
the “functionally necessary” cookies, which are served by the site itself (e.g. not a third party), do not require a banner at all. if you have no third party cookies, you can do entirely without it.
wait, what does semimonthly mean? like, not every month?
wait, where in the world is it common to get paid twice a month? we got rid of that in like the 70s…
it’s called a fanny pack no matter how you wear it
it’s an interesting case for sure. i’m assuming this is upwind of SteamInput because there’s no way to get the game itself to switch input stacks unless they’ve built in multiple ones.
my intuition tells me this happens because there are no event consumers for gamepads active when playing with keyboard, however that seems way too simplistic, all you need is a drain in that case.
i had never heard of wg-input, and the one place that comes up when searching is the dolphin emulator repo. looks like a pretty new windows-specific API (they call it “GameInput”) that they say is a superset of all their earlier apis. don’t understand how that could then bork XInput if it’s already included.
indeed. but when using the term “free market”, regulation and consumer protection is sort of the opposite of what people picture. i have no doubt it would change the dynamics since the economy tends to fill whatever space it’s given, but you could not get away with calling it a free market solution.
right. which the free market is famously all about.
one of those pointy glass hammers should do it
for breaking windows
…and you’re suggesting to implement that… how?
i was thinking salmon and dill
oh i know, i learned to drive on manual since most cars are manual here, i just haven’t owned one myself.
that said, with electric power-steering and throttle-by-wire, there’s no feel to get. it’s all just dead, no matter how fun the clutch is.
i can imagine. i’ve mostly had automatics, but when i was looking for my first car one of the candidates was an old saab with no tacho, it only had little indicators on the speedometer for where to shift. in that situation i imagine muscle memory is created pretty quickly.
especially in a diesel even 1500 is too much.
was fakespot ever available outside the us?