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trarmp

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trarmp
·3 năm trước·discuss
Interesting! I’ve been using Swup for the past three years in my core Wordpress theme, and am quite happy with it. It takes some getting used to (like with how third party scripts will take some special care, since a JS page replace doesn’t always trigger script load events), but once you know the basics, it’s a powerful and neat tool to speed up a website that has a CMS.

The one thing I’m looking forward to in v4 is more advanced hooks, so I can do “fade into eachother” animations. Right now content is replaced in the same container, but it would be real cool if we could have the from and to page exist together during the transition.
trarmp
·3 năm trước·discuss
It is. I don't know what OP is on about, but load-times on the PS5 are practically non-existent for me. Played the latest Horizon game, and on loading screens I can't even read the first few words of the game-tip. It's never longer than a second, if it's not instant.
trarmp
·3 năm trước·discuss
Then just say that in the first place. I don't disagree that Apple users are much more likely to pay for software than Android users, but you don't need hardware sales to make that point.
trarmp
·3 năm trước·discuss
I would bet that Apple would still require developers to sign their apps, like they do on macOS.

That means you that if a vendor does something particularly egregious, stuff akin to malware, they can pull the certificate for that vendor. They don’t do that often: IIRC, they’ve only done that in macOS a handful of times.
trarmp
·3 năm trước·discuss
Those are numbers for smartphone sales, not the software on them. Hardware sales can be negative, sometimes even intended. Just look at console vendors for that.
trarmp
·3 năm trước·discuss
It could well be a riff on the more famous, "The beatings will continue until morale improves"
trarmp
·3 năm trước·discuss
I’ve always wondered where that lag comes from, since I experience it even when doing remote play on my LAN.

Like, we’re able to push a lot of other things through the cable in less than a few milliseconds. Is it the compressing that takes up so much time?
trarmp
·4 năm trước·discuss
> tosti is Dutch for what's called a croque monsieur

Just to be a bit pedantic here, but a tosti is probably a lot simpler. It’s a grilled cheese (technically a melt) sandwich, pressed in a (sometimes specialized) tosti-grill.

A croque monsieur typically also has ham, bechamel, and is prepared in a pan.
trarmp
·4 năm trước·discuss
tl;dr elderly can’t find the year picker in the iOS version of the date picker pop-up.

I feel like the data is flawed. This is (supposedly) 1/3 of tech issues raised by customer support — how many of which are total?
trarmp
·4 năm trước·discuss
> They all have issues with versioning

Not on this scale. Let's leave out the versions of the NodeJS for clarity's sake (nvm is not for managing packages, afaik), and focus on packages. You could argue that the complexity is because of JavaScript's popularity, but it's hard to deny that running a seemingly simple `npm install` will net you tons of dependencies, and that's typical regardless of what you're installing.
trarmp
·4 năm trước·discuss
Oh, I finally have something of value to add to a HN thread!

I was always bothered by this and managed to fix it a few months ago. I had grounded my power-plug-box to the central heating system with some copper (don’t ask), but was wondering why I still got those vibrations whenever I was charging the MacBook.

Turns out, charging through just the monitor (via Thunderbolt) solved this: the monitor was grounded. The default MacBook charger (EU) plug just has just two prongs; a third one for grounding exists, but has to be attached separately.

Edit: indeed, this was on a 14” 2021 MBP. They definitely still get the vibrations when connected to a power source without grounding.