Personally, yes. I'm sitting around 50% right now, but have no reservations upgrading if/when I reach the need to. It's something you'll have to play with yourself to see if you can get it working in a way that makes sense for you - I know a few people who felt it didn't provide enough structure for them.
"With respect to your complaint that Cox intercepts and injects our own data in order to display alerts, etc, we note that browser alerts are a method Cox utilizes to bring customers’ attention to important information that may affect their Internet experience."
They'll also appear if you're nearing your data allowance or if their email service (that you probably don't use) is undergoing maintenance. When I last asked, there is no possible way to opt-out or disable these.
He states "We invented the 90 day free ssl. Why are they copying our business model of 90 day free ssl is the question! Comodo has provided and built a Free SSL model that give SSL for free for 90 days since 2007!"
I was curious because I had never heard of anyone providing free SSL other than StartSSL before Let's Encrypt (and Amazon).
It's a trial. No free renewals, manual or automatic.
"Free SSL certificates are valid for 90 days and are limited to one issuance per domain."
For me, one of the biggest draws over the official client are that it opens links in my OS default browser, not just Chrome. They used to do this, but have made changes so that links only open in Chrome. There's a smattering of threads on this issue with no response from Google or the Hangouts team.
Snyk added a 'test-unpublished' command to check all dependencies, but "is currently limited only to the packages Azer just unpublished, as opposed to all unpublished packages."
Found a GBC implementation as well: https://github.com/bbbbbr/gb-wordle