We use Fastly (and our site is down too) but I asked them about this a couple of years ago.
It is deliberate.
They said it was so they can tell if it is their Varnish service or the customer's Varnish service that is down
That's OK then, if that's we all have to do to run any devices inside our LAN/home network.
Want a NAS box for sharing family files/photos or some other IoT device at home? Just set yourself up some other device to run the docker image, get your self a certificate from LetsEncrypt and then... install it on the NAS box? How does that happen?
Reading about this study and the experiences described in other comments, it seems the experiment is a bit limited in its scope.
The effect of music depends on the person, the type of music (lyrics or instrumental - even if there is applause or not), how well the person knows the music and, of course, the task itself and its complexity.
Until there's a way to test all of those permutations, I think the best we are going to do is rely on all our anecdotal evidence, as it affects ourselves.
One of the reasons I don't switch to Firefox full time is that it (still, after many years) leaks memory.
Use Task Manager to see how much RAM Firefox is using once it's been open a while.
I doubt many other people here are going to ditch Electron completely - the current 'favourite' dev tool is Visual Studio Code which is an Electron app.
Even though Electron is actually a Microsoft supported platform, I understand the connection with Google - Electron uses Chromium rendering engine.
But, this is not the same as Chrome. Chrome uses Chromium [1] but I think all the privacy issues are part of Chrome, not Chromium.
If you look in the clickbait at the bottom of lots of articles, you'll see one advertising a trick that every Android user should know.
It takes you to a website at SecuritySaversOnline.com which has an Advertorial for TotalAV anti-virus, that implies it is free, which it isn't.
I posted a negative review of this site and then called TotalAV to inform them of this site that was perhaps a fake affiliates site, but during the chat, they said it was their site - TotalAV were using a site with fake offers to advertise them.
So, I posted a negative review of them too on TrustPilot - it's one of the 1* reviews here: https://uk.trustpilot.com/review/totalav.com?languages=en&st... (search for cyberspy)
TotalAV disputed my claims, but I demonstrated to TrustPilot that it was a genuine review, even though I wasn't a customer and the review remains.
Why is TrustPilot broken?
TotalAV have over 31K reviews, 87% 5, average 4.8 - but most of them one liners from people who have no review history.
Compare with other AV providers - Sophos have 11 reviews, average 2.1, AVG have 2534, average 1.9, McAfee 358 average 1.4, Norton 347, average 1.5
Basically, people don't review their AV unless thay have a bad experience - or the supplier asks them to.
I pointed out to TrustPilot that TotalAV's review profile looked fake but, while they let my review stay they have done nothing to rectify the entirely disproportionate review profile of TotalAV
Though less serious, my wife has a similar problem with Amazon. She tried to review a product (first review for a very long time) and was greeted with this message:
"! We apologize but Amazon has noticed some unusual reviewing activity on this account. As a result, all reviews submitted by this account have been removed and this account will no longer be able to contribute reviews and other content on Amazon. If you would like to learn more, please see our community guidelines. To contact us about this decision, please email reviews - [email protected]."
The 'community guidelines' link goes to a page with what the rules are, but doesn't say what rules have been broken.
We emailed Amazon, using the email address in the post and got this reply:
"I relayed your information to the team trained to handle this scenario regarding your inability to post reviews. They are not able to provide an exact date or time when they expect this issue to be resolved.
For more information about our policies, please see our Community Guidelines (http://www.amazon.co.uk/review-guidelines)
We appreciate your patience in this matter.
Warmest regards,"
'Warmest Regards'? Really - you just told me she's locked out and it's gonna stay like that for the foreseeable future. :(
The same problem happens with UK phone numbers, where the leading 0 gets chopped off
Solvable if there's a space between the dialling code and the number, but when individuals enter their number, they don't always do this
In the UK, the shop Lidl was supposed to be pronounced Lie-del and I think that is how it is pronounced in Europe.
But, everyone pronounced it with a short 'i' and now they've adopted that in adverts - 'Every little [lidl] helps' - doesn't work if you pronounce it Lie-del!
If they wanted it pronounced Lie-del - they should have spelt it like that - Lidle!