Favstar was useful back in the day when you didn't get notifications about favs, etc. Not so much anymore. I also used it to read the most liked tweets of certain users, but these greedy fucks want you to pay to read the top one (which you can bypass with Inspect Element) and to read more than the top 10 or so. So, good riddance.
I just installed it on Windows 10 and, if you change the configuration, it's high DPI aware and looks gorgeous on my screen! That's something I did not expect.
It's normal, no? They deploy IPv6 because they don't have enough IPv4 addresses. And since most servers in the world are not IPv6 ready and will never be for a long time, if you want to reach an IPv4 server you have to go through their CGNAT which may have a piss-poor performance.
I really wish RIPE could force ISPs to release the addresses they don't need :(
I don't find it surprising that they can't find a correlation between GDP/growing user base/IPv4 stress and IPv6 deployment.
IPv6 deployment is a matter of politics. It depends on the opinions of the network personnel, on the hardware they have in their core network, on the hardware their customers have (CPEs), on the support contracts they have, etc. That's what decides whether they put a CGNAT in place, whether they buy more IPv4 addresses, or whether they deploy IPv6.
>For example, the 2048buntu snap was submitted as proprietary, so we can't actually see the package contents, except for the init script which you can see above.
Unless the Snap Store uses some kind of DRM, I don't see how that can be the case. Just install it and see the contents in your filesystem?