We’re excited to unveil a faster, more streamlined way to create, share, and manage your content.
From: Introducing: Our New, High-Speed Editor — The WordPress.com Blog
I’ll try it at once
We’re excited to unveil a faster, more streamlined way to create, share, and manage your content.
From: Introducing: Our New, High-Speed Editor — The WordPress.com Blog
I’ll try it at once
I would not wish to administer Windows even to my worst enemy
Frizzy: il primo telefono Android a tastiera
http://www.bitmat.it/blog/news/66901/frizzy-primo-telefono-android-tastiera
Tutto quello che avrebbe dovuto essere il redivivo Nokia 3310
Those people of Gnome are getting wiser. They took it a while tought:
From GNOME 3.26, we are therefore planning not to show status icons in GNOME Shell by default. We feel that, long-term, this change will enable us to provide a better experience for our users (I’ll go into some detail about this in the rest of the post). We also feel that the consequences of the change won’t be as dramatic as they would have been in the past.
We do recognise that people are using status icons today and that some will continue to want to use them. That’s absolutely fine, and our decision to stop showing status icons by default is in no way a negative judgement on this. If you want or need to continue using status icons, you should feel free to use the TopIcons GNOME Shell extension. This will continue to work and the extension offers a better status icon experience than the current default anyway.
From: Status Icons and GNOME – Form and Function
They plan to change a basic UI feature that have there since almost forever – status icons were already there in Gnome 0.x – but they realized that not everyone will want to follow them and they while changing the default behaviour they still allow for the old way.
They do have become wiser. I’m positively touched.
https://www.lffl.org/2017/08/purism-crowdfunding-supera-100-000.html
Oh, now I know which phone to buy next time: this purism or the Fairphone?
Protocol Labs is a research, development, and deployment lab for network protocols.
Well, two months ago I bought my wife a used Canon EOS 1100D to allow her express her photographer taler she showed some months ago, during a training Ju-Jitsu session for our daughters with a Japanese elder teacher (教師?) when someone put in her hand the DSLR of the Italian head of Ju-Jitsu dojos.
I chose it among the other because it allowed to install Magic Lantern
Magic Lantern is a free firmware addon for Canon EOS DSLR cameras that adds a host of features to assist photographers and videographers. Unlock your Canon DSLR.
Now I hesitate to install it. I don’t want to ruin her experience with a piece of experimental software. Had it been mine I would have installed it.
But it’s not mine anymore. I chose it, I bought it. But I donated it to her. It’s not “mine” anymore even thought everything mine is her and everything her is mine. True, it is but for higher goods.
Installing Magic Lantern would be plainly a whim of mine, an act of sheer selfishness.
So, no; I’ll leave her DSLR pristine, as I bought it.