We are going to have a housing crisis and more because of climate change and people moving from places where temperatures are unbearable and the weather is more unstable.
> The new Firefox for Android that launched in August loads pages 20 percent faster than at the start of the year making it the fastest Firefox browser ever on Android.
But messes up video experience when going full screen, dropped support for almost all extensions without warning, sometimes I have to restart the app because it freezes, header sometimes doesn't show up when scrolling up and ux is not quite there yet.
I had to downgrade the android app version and don't even get me started on my experience with Firefox on Ubuntu (random crashes, sometimes I can't close tabs or open them, I keep hearing audio from a tab I already closed and some more).
I really love the product and I hope the Firefox teams makes it better.
I do not agree and this is coming from someone that loves SQL. I only experienced the problems that this article describes with people that do not know how the ORM works.
You can use an ORM and it works flawless for most cases. There might be some cases where I need to write SQL to generate a custom function or some weird edge case but that is why the ORM gives you the possibility to write your own SQL if you want.
I forgot to mention that having to write raw SQL queries and mantain them, doing migrations and keeping up with the changes is kind of a pain when most of the time the ORM takes care of everything.
I see a lot of ads on Google Maps while navigating on the map as markers, while searching for something specific like a restaurant and if I make a route to go somewhere most of the time I get uber ads injected as an option I should take instead of using public transport.
From their FAQ about dependencies in this case for js:
Can I use npm with Workers?
Workers has no explicit support for npm, but you can use any build tool or package manager you need to create your Worker script. Just upload to us the final, built, script with all dependencies included.
They actually do penalize slow and cluttered websites but not enough. I've seen some companies websites download 20mb for a simple landing page and still come up higher than other pages that are way faster.
They should penalize more instead of forcing us to use AMP almost as a power move from them.
You could give uMatrix a try, I use it to block cookies, images, media and iframes. If you really want to allow a site to use all that it is a bit easier to do (I think)