Google demands developers pay them $5 for the privilege of letting people put extensions on the Chrome Store.
I think not.
Google demands developers pay them $5 for the privilege of letting people put extensions on the Chrome Store.
I think not.
Physics of emotions — some convert easily between each other (e.g. frustration is easy to turn into positive creative energy), others are much harder to change and require significant outside energy (e.g. jadedness)
Are those even emotions, in the strictest sense? More thought patterns or alignments?
@cstanhope Twitter do indeed shorten all links, they’re just a little bit more honest about it. But I’m certainly going to make the extension unshorten them all too (there’s enough info in the HTML do to that without extra HTTP requests).
Facebook use shady javascript to replace legit-looking link URLs with their own tracking endpoint.
I made a browser extension which removes this: facebook-anticlickjack.
It uses javascript to remove javascript from what should just be HTML. I call it “aggressive degredation”.
@benwerd I refer to it as the “A4 shop window QR code” problem
“How do we switch it off?”
“Just press en…” BEEP BEEP BEEP
Thus concludeth John Walters’s first Facetime call. Give him a big hand, everyone!
Headed over to @hakkavelin for a few hours, the bell will be on the door if you want to get in.
What good fiction is available about dealing with emergent systems and behaviour?
Most of our culture teaches us to look at figureheads and individuals — cut off the villain’s head and the story ends happily. But life is too complex to be reasoned about like this.
Off the top of my head, the only non scifi work of fiction I can think of which talks about this is Grapes of Wrath. Any others spring to mind?
Also found this excellent shot of Jovian Salak, casually geographing:
Which reminds me, I still want to make the “Geographers” mock TV series intro.
Found this interesting piece of #dataviz from my GCSE Geography project whilst digging through site archives whilst trying to fix some dead URLs:
Apart from the obvious flaw of hard-to-read text, and the more subtle distortion of the results due to them being overlaid onto a contoured 3D landscape, it’s actually not that bad.
en.riff.is is an excellent example of why device testing is an important part of responsive design (try using it at iPad screen size)
#wikipedia article of the week: List of fictional railway stations
#TIL throwdough.com exists and that it’s the official dough of the American pizza team and that there’s an American pizza team and that they have practise dough #food #baking #pizza
“But of course, that is an exceptionally clever chicken… and very experienced with electrical devices of all sorts”
Why not to make assumptions about where your site visitors come from send #js to do a hyperlink’s job:
(That link didn’t work, obv)
@anna_debenham I publish microformats2 with classic mf fallback. Also consume lots of microformats data and built some tools to help others do the same:
Lots and lots of chocolate in the office today, courtesy of Brian Suda and borgamynd.com
@w03_ what’s this one about?
@julien51 WATCH OUT! They’re trying to trick you by putting the comma in the wrong place — it’s actually only $93,000,000 :)
Discuss adding #microformats to @duckduckgo special result pages here: duck.co/topic/add-microformats-to-results
Unfortunately page has a JS error on FF Nightly :(