

On the frontend.
On the frontend.
I’d look into MongoDB Atlas for the database itself and Google Cloud Storage or AWS S3 for storing images and videos with the link to their sources stored in the database.
I know they do, but it’s lacking so many languages.
I hope Mozilla can benefit of a good local translation engine that could come out of it as well.
I’ve set up mine to automatically start on a specific HDMI port, that fixed the issue for confused family members.
To find the feature though was not easy. Had to look up how to access the hotel mode hidden menu. Apparently LG has extra features it only wants hotels to be able to use.
Am I missing something? Why does whatever Grok say is considered relevant? Is it aware of the details of the policy changes from X?
Thank you.
Did you think Amazon didn’t know how Honey operates?
Difficult to prove the latter of course, but out of the two, it’s not what most people seem to be complaining the most about.
You’d need the first one to get big enough to pull up the second one anyways.
That would arguably be even worst.
I’m struggling to understand how everyone thought Honey made money. I have assumed from the first time I saw an ad for them that this is how they operate. It’s not like it’s difficult to prove or disprove either.
Lemmy being decentralized doesn’t make it very search engine friendly. Because it’s federated across multiple instances, none of them reach a critical mass big enough / trusted to be constantly at the top of results. Duplicated content across instances can be flagged as spammy content.
Like Lemmy or Mastodon, BlueSky was made with the idea of federation. While BlueSky is not there yet, federated services are inherently very easy to scrape.
Maybe it’s time for people to understand that anything they post/vote/comment/like should be considered public domain.
Don’t just “delete” Twitter as in deleting the app. Please also close your account.
You should be able to do that with a ublock origin filter.
Maybe ask on the community: [email protected]
It works on Android, but I don’t believe it works on iOS.
For that they use iframes, which have a different security system.
Because of the CORS settings on Google’s servers would tell your browser to not go forward with the request. There are two ways it could eventually be possible:
He mentioned that he does and the password manager didn’t prompt to autocomplete the password automatically, so he had to force it.