That’s rather optimistic. I’m pretty sure it’s daily. Although, perhaps it’s only once a month that it gets upvoted
That’s rather optimistic. I’m pretty sure it’s daily. Although, perhaps it’s only once a month that it gets upvoted
This really is a great loss. It was a true, natural icon of Northumberland. The landmark I pointed out to people most often.
I do hope funding can be secured to fill the void left behind.
Chrome’s UI was light years ahead of the competition. I’d be tempted to say they had an impact on the design of all desktop applications.
They only require permission to write to the password field, they don’t necessarily need to read passwords. Although it does change the work flow for some users.
And then farmer gets stiffed with increased insurance premiums. I really hope that’s not how it works.
Hopefully the farmer can directly sue the owner for actual and emotional damages with Farm insurance covering the legal costs.
The obsession with Shakespeare puts a lot of students off literature
How many people are actually returning this product though? Nobody is going to any effort to return a product that costs so little.
And everything I’ve read about this recall makes the reason clear so I can’t see anyone opting not to just consume it - which more than likely they already did immediately on purchase.
I’d be interested to know how many days per year these centres are actually used. I’m presuming it’s very few so it seems pretty logical to sell them off and instead rely on booking shared activity centres when they’re actually required
That’s what I was questioning. Why do do the work but then not make it accessible?
It’s a similar thought to this topic: https://lemmy.world/post/3179113
I’ll rephrase. Why require an editor? The most common viewers of SVG do not support layers
Why not export them rather than requiring people to install Inkscape just to view the files?
Has GitHub actually done anything negative? Your comments really just sound like fear mongering, I can’t see any actual issues.
What is the bloat you’re referring to? The UI is clean and simple. Navigating and searching code is intuitive. The issue tracker is basic but reliable. Releases are clear. GitHub Actions are complex but featureful and incredibly useful. GitHub Packages are basic but useful. GitHub Copilot is damn impressive.
Ubuntu because it requires the least amount of hack fixes to get working.
And snap has vastly simplified software installation.