I’m not a front-end dev by any means, but man is Svelte nice to use.
I’m not a front-end dev by any means, but man is Svelte nice to use.
That’s one of the takeaways here, there were a lot more details.
The stuff about everyone’s baseline energy consumption being pretty much just linked to your body weight (and in the long term being unaffected by the amount of exercise you do) was pretty eye-opening for me. I had no idea that if you live a sedentary lifestyle, your body uses that extra energy budget for stuff like your immune system (which is bad), and this could be why exercise reduces inflammation, etc.
But you can just do that with a normal VPN? What’s the advantage doing it like this?
Common windows W 😎
^/s
Slower as in 500ms slower iirc.
Linux users when bloat
Deletes codebase
Looks about right, approved ✅
Dragging out tabs doesn’t create a new window while the mouse is still held down (like chrome does), which makes positioning the dragged-out tab very difficult. And the current implementation on Firefox bugs out when I’m dragging a tab out between monitors.
Chrome’s implementation of this is flawless, it’s one of the biggest things I miss.
Please Mozilla just let me properly drag tabs out of windows like chrome does
Step 1: get a cat
Step 2: ???
Profit!
I’d assume it’s got something to do with the system you’re using them on, some issue with power or something that better quality drives are able to handle, but not these.
These are cheap, yes, but if everyone ordering these was failing just outside the return period, they’d have far more 1 star ratings.
If you have regular backups, not an issue. I use bitwarden self hosted through home assistant, which makes daily backups trivial.
There’s a forum I think, discord seems to be, as it clearly says, for real-time support and discussion.
I despise Discord as an alternative to a proper support forum, but having both options like this is great.
What’s that?
/s
In what world is this is a resource monster??
Sorry, that’s my bad, I was under the impression that Blazor and Razor were two distinct ways of doing things. Thanks for that link, it was very helpful.
Ah you mean Razor then. Blazor lets you run C# in the browser, but Razor is the one that needs a server and streams changes to the client using signalR.
Bundle size is my only complaint with blazor, has to send the .net runtime in webassembly to the client.
Aside from this, C# on the browser is an absolute joy to use. I’d use for everything if I could.
On the other hand, C# is great
.com domains recently got more expensive. Almost double in price compared to CloudFlare (who sell domains at cost).
See, if you were a bat, that wouldn’t be an issue