I've used the basic html mode before when the normal (js heavy) one was a bit slow, and it ended up being much faster even if every action requires a whole new page request/render.
> Neural nets evolved to classify edible and poisonous mushrooms took advantage of the data being presented in alternating order, and didn't actually learn any features of the input images
I think the http-equiv="Refresh" redirect is done so that the http referer header is from t.co, and not twitter.com (or whereever the user clicked the link from).
(I don't think rel='noreferrer' is fully supported by all browsers)
While it is nice to add some spacing and make things a bit easier to read, I don't really see the point in this.
If you want it to be easily parsable by a human then there are hundreds of applications designed for this. The most common being spreadsheets like Excel.
And what happens if you have a list of domains, but one contains a really long url (300 characters wide?). It will mess up the columns for every single row above and below it as well.
Also adding comments will completely break any existing software (I think most programs can handle some more whitespace, but you couldn't import the final example into Excel, I don't think (untested))
There are companies out there that offer proxies from 'real' US resident IP addresses. I think these companies use tactics like this to be able to offer real residential IPs (and not IP ranges belonging to hosting companies)
This is the first one that came up on google - https://stormproxies.com/ - I'm not saying that specific company is in any way related to this device or tactic (it is just the first on google for 'residential address ip proxy', but I think it is companies similar to this that will pay people for access to their routers and sell that access.
I'm certain this has been published before on here and that most people are aware of this page. But with the recent news about the EU timezone change it might be relevant.
time zones change all the time. Most OS's automatically take these changes into account, I believe. ( see https://serverfault.com/questions/192858/updating-systems-ol... for a bit of info, but I think it is often included in OS updates rather than having to do it manually normally.)
But if you don't do this, you can still use <tab> - and if there are more than one option it'll list the possibilities. With this you just have to tab through all the options to see what is there.
According to https://support.google.com/mail/answer/15049?hl=en, the following link should set it to basic html mode (I haven't tested it) https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/h/1pq68r75kzvdr/?v%3Dlui
I've used the basic html mode before when the normal (js heavy) one was a bit slow, and it ended up being much faster even if every action requires a whole new page request/render.