He won’t cover it, not enough mascot horror.
He won’t cover it, not enough mascot horror.
I once saw a computer at my workplace with over a year of uptime…
Wow I actually love this idea. There could be some common symbol in the crests to denote what kind of open source license they follow (GNU, MIT, etc), affiliation with other software, all sorts of cool stuff.
If the world is going towards simplified logos, gotta at least make yours good. Firefox did that. Can’t complain.
Yes, but portals violate basic physics anyway.
A portal that faces downwards into another portal is effectively a perpetual motion machine. Drop a ferromagnetic object into the loop and wrap some wires around the loop, now you have an infinite electric generator.
Agreed. That was my first thought.
It’s hard to overstate my satisfaction
All motion is relative. To understand how the people will move, we need to look at them relative to the portal. If the trolly is moving at 5 m/s relative to the ground, then the people are moving at 1 m/s relative to it. So they enter the portal moving at 1 m/s and exit at the same speed.
B since all movement is relative.
This was a triumph.
…not sure if I should search the rate of contraception use among rapists. I’d rather not end up on a list.
I don’t think the makers of this product understand that condoms are not actually required for sex.
We should all take up writing backwards like Da Vinci. Benefits include:
I remember in Kindergarten when my teacher tried to force me to write with my non-dominant hand.
Perhaps today is a good day to die!
Building a browser is hard, and it’s even harder when one of the maker of the most popular browser also operates several of the most popular websites. So most other browsers (Edge, Brave, Opera, and many more) are Chromium under the hood. This means that they often implement Google’s preferred web functionality as opposed to the actual standard. If Google wants some feature going into the browser, most Chromium derivatives will follow their lead. Even though Brave has rejected many of Google’s moves, I’d argue it still isn’t enough since they still give Google some control over web standards.
The Internet needs to be impartial and fair in its design, this means it shouldn’t be influenced by any one interest in particular. Google’s indirect influence over nearly the whole browser market goes against the principle of an open web. The only way to fight effectively this is to use an independent browser, like Firefox.
This is your hourly reminder that Brave is still Chromium and still contributes to Google’s influence over internet standards.
Time for a Microcenter visit…