It’s more so lucky that there was someone diligently doing that. It could’ve easily gone unnoticed had there not been someone like him.
Boof
It’s more so lucky that there was someone diligently doing that. It could’ve easily gone unnoticed had there not been someone like him.
Yes, it’s a full 24 hours, but a library doesn’t use 24:00:00 to represent the last hour, it’s 23:59:59. Once it hits 24:00, it rolls over to 00:00:00.
Hence my initial error of answering 23.
It’s not valid, but I don’t edit out erronous answers because I believe all data should be preserved, no matter how dumb it makes one look.
Pseudocode and/or a variant of lua.
Most date libraries count to 23h 59m 59s then roll over to 00h 00m 00s. So the answer is 23 hours, not 24.
Edit: I’m big dum dum. It’s asking string length of “Monday”, thus 6.
Spaces have been a thing for over 2 years now.
This is in addition to forums, git, wiki, etc, which those communities also provide.
Matrix is the best platform IMO, and actual dev communities agree. (See: Github, Mozilla, KDE, Nix, the list goes on)
Absolute chads those madlads
Personally I suggest you straight up install Librewolf instead.
That said, most extensions aside from ublock are pointless these days.
Try Windscribe, they offer residential and datacenter IP’s. I don’t get the point, but it’s your money.
I erroneously said the IP’s are less shared, but that’s not the case per the page.
But still, they get past more ip-blocking.
https://windscribe.com/staticips
After reading where I’m even posting: Renting a cheap VPS and using Wireguard to tunnel to it is also an option.
Then it really is only used by you.
See: Anything that can open ports. NAT of any kind tends to not allow opening ports.
You can get Let’s Encrypt certificates for DuckDNS, so you don’t even need to own anything.
Works with anything that can open ports. DuckDNS works by pinging their service from anywhere to update the target IP for the subdomain.
You do realize all this is easily done with a reverse proxy + DuckDNS?
I wash mine when it starts growing mold. So anywhere from every 3 years to every 6 years.
Imo this is why big projects that are borderline like this should use github alternatives, preferably self hosted solutions. This was always going to happen.
What we need isn’t browsers. What we need is an universal way to write extensions cross-browser.
Browsers themselves are easy to make. The problem is convincing extension devs to work with yet another codebase.
E: Think of it this way. There’s a lot of open source browsers out there.
Are you using any of them? Probably not.
Would you use one if it doesn’t have for example Bitwarden, Ublock Origin, Sponsorblock, and such mandatory extensions?
Users follow extensions and ease of use; not what’s good for them.
E2: A good project would be a builder extension for VSC for example, which compiles to all supported browsers.
Browser devs would then contribute to said extension via native-made plugins.
Cooperation of two fronts.
Bookmarking this.
You do realize with more donations they can AFFORD to hire more people, and to get the help they need? Money is the solution. Let’s not downplay the value of it.