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thehatfox, to asklemmy in What's the issue with current browser engines?
@thehatfox@lemmy.world avatar

One of the main issues is the lack of competition. There are now only 3 main browser engines, Blink, Gecko and WebKit. Blink (which poses Chrome and Edge) is by far the largest, and has a the enormous marketing might of Google (and Microsoft to a lesser extent) behind it. WebKit runs Safari, which only runs on Apple platforms and arguably only has the market share it does is because Apple doesn’t allow other browser engines to run on iPhones and iPads. Gecko, the engine of Firefox, continues to slide into irrelevance (which pains me to say as a long time Firefox user).

We are in real danger of the web being trapped in a browser monoculture again, like the dark dark times of Internet Explorer’s dominance. This led to a period of stagnation in web technology Microsoft at the time put little effort into developing IE. Allowing Blink/Chrome to do the same will likely be just as damaging, albeit in different ways - particularly for privacy on the web.

For the good of the web no one company should ever be in the position to dictate web standards, which is why we need a healthy and competitive marketplace of web browsers and browser engines. The problem is that web standards have now become so complex developing an indecent browser engine is now a monumental task. Opera gave up on Presto, once the poster child for browser innovation. Microsoft, a company with far more resources, gave up on Trident. Mozilla was developing a new generation browser engine called Servo, but gave up on the project also.

thehatfox, to comicstrips in "Outdoor Cat vs Indoor Cat" by Sarah Andersen
@thehatfox@lemmy.world avatar

Yes, according to the RSPB habitat destruction from expanding urban areas and farmland is the main threat to bird life in the UK.

When my family had a cat it would mostly catch and bring home earthworms.

thehatfox, to comicstrips in "Outdoor Cat vs Indoor Cat" by Sarah Andersen
@thehatfox@lemmy.world avatar

There was a BBC documentary a few years ago where they gave GPS tracking collars to a bunch of cats in a neighbourhood and tracked where they went. Each of the cats had their own territory and favourite locations.

thehatfox, to homeassistant in Accurate/smart oil sensor?
@thehatfox@lemmy.world avatar

I also have an oil boiler, and a tank in the garden. The tank was fitting with an Apollo Ultrasonic oil level sensor, which sends a signal to base station with a very basic LCD display in the house via 433Mhz radio.

I use an RTL-SDR USB radio dongle, a cheap 433MHz antenna and the rtl_433 software to monitor the signals from the ultrasonic sensor, which transits roughly once an hour. The level measurement transmitted is a fairly accurate centimetre value (I compared it with manual measurements with a dip stick for a few months).

The base station only showed a vague level indication with 10 bars, but now I have more a more precise smart display of the tank level, without any extra modification to the tank system.

thehatfox, (edited ) to memes in I love those path
@thehatfox@lemmy.world avatar

That’s one of the big problems with maths teaching in the UK, it’s almost actively hostile to giving any sort of context.

When a subject is reduced to a chore done for its own sake it’s no wonder most students don’t develop a passion or interest in it.

thehatfox, to memes in They are too expensive and gimicky either way
@thehatfox@lemmy.world avatar

But what if you are privacy conscious and poor?

thehatfox, to memes in TELL ME YOUR SECRETS
@thehatfox@lemmy.world avatar

Printing a Roman dodecahedron seems like an interesting torture test for a 3D printer, plenty of overhangs.

thehatfox, to memes in TELL ME YOUR SECRETS
@thehatfox@lemmy.world avatar

My theory is that they had no practical purpose, they were just a trendy knickknack that eventually fell out of fashion. A Roman equivalent of a fidget spinner or something.

In a few thousand years whatever has become of humanity will be digging up fidget spinners and wondering about them in the same way we do with dodecahedrons. It’s not as if anyone will have been preserving fidget spinner media for millennia to explain them.

thehatfox, to lemmyshitpost in The four houses dads belong to.
@thehatfox@lemmy.world avatar

I used to use cheapo tools, but I borrowed a Makita circular saw once and it was so nice to use in comparison that I’ve been on team teal ever since.

thehatfox, (edited ) to lemmyshitpost in The four houses dads belong to.
@thehatfox@lemmy.world avatar

There’s some Bosch stuff in the UK. I’m a Makita person but I recently bought a Bosch glue gun and it’s the most solid feeling glue gun I’ve ever had.

Not a professional line but I also know a few people that love the Parkside tools from Lidl, they are good value home tools so I’m told.

thehatfox, to lemmybewholesome in A self-care reminder
@thehatfox@lemmy.world avatar

I read that as “unhinge your jaw” at first, although on second thoughts being a snake maybe seems less stressful.

thehatfox, to memes in No take backs?
@thehatfox@lemmy.world avatar

Cypher was right. Ignorance is bliss.

thehatfox, to memes in No take backs?
@thehatfox@lemmy.world avatar

The distributed computing explanation for purpose of the Matrix doesn’t seem to make much more sense than the power plant one.

All of the nodes are continuously occupied by living in the simulation. Unless the machines had a desperate need to understand human society circa 1999, there is nothing useful the machines could do with all the brain power.

thehatfox, to memes in Japan is living in the future that the 1990s dreamed of.
@thehatfox@lemmy.world avatar

The UK National Health Service (NHS) still loves fax machines. There was supposed to be a plan to phase them all out by 2020 but it never happened.

They are still somewhat common in some B2B sectors here too, although most businesses have migrated to e-fax systems now.

thehatfox, to memes in Japan is living in the future that the 1990s dreamed of.
@thehatfox@lemmy.world avatar

Cash isn’t much use for making purchases online, which is also where an ever increasing amount of spending is done.

There’s no coin or note slot on my laptop, and contrary to the internet’s advice throwing money at my screen doesn’t seem to work either.

I used to be a big proponent of cash but with the bulk of my financial activity happening online now I can’t help it feeling a bit redundant.

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