Up next: companies continue 5-day workweeks anyway, because they’re not even rational in their mandates. (See also: forced RTO).
Up next: companies continue 5-day workweeks anyway, because they’re not even rational in their mandates. (See also: forced RTO).
Not sure, but Wiki has a bunch of footnotes that may explain
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Progressive_web_app#Browser_support
Edit: it’s just this article, which seems like too much fluff to bother reading https://www.fastcompany.com/90597411/mozilla-firefox-no-ssb-pwa-support
true for the industry at large --especially with these interest rates
Awesome. What’s the difference between the three plots here?
Can anyone verify that this is also true for platforms beyond windows (what is plotted in the link by default)?
(I tried to change the plot to show macOS and Linux, but the plotting site is dubiously functional on mobile, plus there are a bewildering number of plot options with long, confusing names).
Oh I see, you meant swipe actions in general were missing; “collapse” is one of several possible swipe actions, so that’s why you mentioned it.
Hmm, what do you mean by this exactly? Dragging from anywhere on the right-hand edge of the screen?
Collapse seems to work for me. Otherwise, agreed. It’s much snappier than Memmy (what I’ve been using mostly thus far), on the upside!
Edit: also would like an option to see both upvote and downvote count
Yeah, it appeared on first open (the one that launched automatically when I compiled it in XCode).
NBD, it’s a nifty app. I love native compiled apps.
OK, I opened it again and authentication appears to be working! Perhaps there was an additional issue with when I ran it from the Releases
folder vs. when I ran it after moving it to /Applications
in the sense that it invalidated the fact that I authorized KeyChain access prior to moving?
Comments still fail to load, though (can see 31 comments should exist, but it displays nothing; scrolling down doesn’t reveal them, either)
Edit: ah, I think keychain access must not have worked. It didn’t prompt me; so I’m not sure how to grant it manually.
Edit 2: built from source and it did request access this time. I granted it, but the behavior seemed otherwise the same as above.
Same. Also, doesn’t seem to let me sign in (on SDF); the login box goes away, but when I switch to the feed, the lane on the RHS says “Lemmy.world”. When I go back to the profile page, it shows me the login box again, suggesting the login actually failed.
Does Signal back up in plaintext in the cloud? (If so that doesn’t sound like E2E encryption… unless the ‘ends’ are uh… also constituted as the cloud itself which is… defeating the purpose).
Where do the pub/ private keys live, exactly, tbh. (Assuming it is asymmetric encryption that they use?)
Edit: ah, misread. I thought you said that you were not joining it due to it storing plain text in the cloud.