It really depends on the use case. 😏
It really depends on the use case. 😏
I’d like to have darkness during daytime. I’m not sure I would pay for it, but I’d like it very much.
…of crows? What do you want to confess to them? 😶
Um… there is a browsing history. It stores all the links. :)
They shouldn’t play with our food. Food is not a toy.
but looks like they don’t include a split spacebar, so not for me unfortunately.
You could split it yourself. It’s ceramics after all.
This has to be the most idiotic thing I read this week.
Landgericht Hamburg enters the room to agree with the plaintiff.
Who doesn’t. I’m sure he also consumed bread. (But I fail to see the connection with the case. )
:) the hardware is still more capable than a brick:
Plug in favourite installation media stick, push reset button (if there is one), reinstall.
Or if you have ipmi/bmc/lom. 🤷♀️
Can an OS be bricked?:
A brick (or bricked device) is a mobile device, game console, router, computer or other electronic device that is no longer functional due to corrupted firmware, a hardware problem, or other damage.[1] The term analogizes the device to a brick’s modern technological usefulness.[2]
Edit: you may click the tiny down arrow if you think it can’t. ;)
Which Page?
lots of dom modifications
That’s good to know. These modifications are needed to replace the style sheet details, I guess?
passes around far too much data between processes.
What does this mean? Do you have a link where I could read up on the details? Thanks.
Maybe. Does it make a big performance difference which css (dark reader or delivered by wiki) is used?
Is it known how the default to dark mode setting is persisted if let’s say a plugin removed all the Wikipedia cookies on window close? A get or post parameter?
Either way it’s a good thing that wiki offers a dark mode.
Dark Reader Plugin already solved that issue.
As an alternative: when the table is set with Bowie Knife and gun, the gun goes to the left.
I like your pitch black humour.
I don’t think so. Metadata is unencrypted (i.e. your contacts, who sends messages to whom and how often and when).
Messages itself are encrypted.
Am I wrong?