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19 votes
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Bytecode Alliance: Building a secure by default, composable future for WebAssembly
9 votes -
Why 3D logos fell out of favor overnight
8 votes -
Firefox to hide notification popups by default starting next year
22 votes -
Certbot usability case study: Making it easier to get HTTPS certificates
12 votes -
Designing accessible color systems
27 votes -
South Korean national and 337 others arrested and charged worldwide in the takedown of Welcome To Video, the largest darknet child pornography website
19 votes -
A site to randomly stumble on to new and unique webpages - stumblingon
27 votes -
Crunchyroll and WEBTOON team up to co-produce new animated content
4 votes -
‘Lore Olympus’: Webtoon and The Jim Henson Company will partner for YA animated series
4 votes -
I made a (very, very) basic Tildes scraper and CLI browser ruby gem
Here's the ruby gem page and here's the github. Right now it comes with a command line browser that can browse the front page and group pages with no sorting options, and you can view the contents...
Here's the ruby gem page and here's the github. Right now it comes with a command line browser that can browse the front page and group pages with no sorting options, and you can view the contents of a topic (link or text) aswell as the comments. The methods defined in lib/tilde-scraper/api.rb can be used to scrape tildes pages into Group, Page, Topic, and Comment objects.
Right now it's super basic and messy, but I figured if anyone was interested in it it would be the people here.
9 votes -
CSS is weird because it's solving a weird problem: what does it mean to design for an infinite and unknown canvas?
12 votes -
Popular podcasts app Pocket Casts goes free, web and desktop app now subscription-based
22 votes -
Where to put buttons on forms
12 votes -
Web scraping doesn’t violate anti-hacking law, appeals court rules
12 votes -
Boulet - Flash-Back
7 votes -
Tyranny of the Clock - Lessons we learned when debugging a scaling problem on GitLab.com
12 votes -
I'm not a robot
7 votes -
The world's oldest webcam is shutting down after a quarter of a century
21 votes -
[Chrome 82, 2020Q2] Deprecate FTP support
7 votes -
If you lose your iPhone, you can’t pay your Apple Card bill on the web
6 votes -
New CSS Features in Firefox 68
18 votes -
The endless, invisible persuasion tactics of the internet
8 votes -
The Mutable Web
5 votes -
How to make up planets and accidentally influence people
9 votes -
MDN (beta) is now built with React
6 votes -
Google open-sources their robots.txt parser and releases an RFC for formalizing the Robots Exclusion Protocol specification
10 votes -
Zach Weinersmith, the cartoonist behind Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal and co-author of SOONISH, does a Q&A
12 votes -
Twins for a Day
8 votes -
What happens behind the scenes when we type www.google.com in a browser? (2015)
8 votes -
You (probably) don't need ReCAPTCHA
26 votes -
Branding the Decentralized Web
6 votes -
Webcomics: An oral history
12 votes -
100s of tabs: what is there?
Those of you who keep hundreds of tabs open: I'm curious how and why you use them. I'd hoard tabs in the past, but in a sad incident a browser (Firefox) restart caused the loss of all my 10s of...
Those of you who keep hundreds of tabs open: I'm curious how and why you use them. I'd hoard tabs in the past, but in a sad incident a browser (Firefox) restart caused the loss of all my 10s of open tabs that was accumulated over weeks long research about a topic, I decided to never trust tabs again. Now I'm making use of my bookmars toolbar, Org mode and Instapaper for most of the stuff having many tabs open was the method before. So, for me, tabs were for keeping stuff handy during research, read-it-later lists, and temporary bookmarks. What are the use cases for you?
19 votes -
Opera Reborn 3: No modern browser is perfect, but this may be as close as it gets
14 votes -
I challenge you to use Epiphany for a week!
When Edge died, I got worried about loosing competition to the Blink engine and as such, I went exploring other alternatives to realize.. there's not a whole lot, there's blink, gecko and webkit....
When Edge died, I got worried about loosing competition to the Blink engine and as such, I went exploring other alternatives to realize.. there's not a whole lot, there's blink, gecko and webkit.
So with that, I decided to try epiphany - Gnome's web browser. It uses Webkit which is what Blink was forked from so it's not terribly different in theory but the years apart has made that more apparent. It's fairly elegant in my opinion and it lacks some features, sure.
Anyways, to get to what I wanted to do this week, well, I'd like to challenge you all to use it for a week, mostly for bug hunting purposes and possibly to throw ideas at the project. Worth mentioning, I'm not affiliated with the project, just a user.
So to make sure we're all on the same page, we'll use the development Epiphany flatpak, this way we can be sure that the problem is in the current codebase. So, to install it :
Let's install the gnome-nightly repos as per instructions here :
flatpak remote-add --if-not-exists gnome-nightly https://sdk.gnome.org/gnome-nightly.flatpakrepo flatpak remote-add --if-not-exists gnome-apps-nightly --from https://sdk.gnome.org/gnome-apps-nightly.flatpakrepoThen, let's install the development version by doing so :
flatpak install org.gnome.Epiphany.DevelThen just launch it and have fun with it!
if you run into any bugs, look at the contribution guide here and report the bugs in the repo after checking that the bug is not already present of course!
12 votes -
XSS attacks on Googlebot allow search index manipulation
7 votes -
Is it OK to scrape Tildes?
I wanted to keep the title---and the question, for that matter---generic, but my use case is that I want to make a backup of my posts on Tildes, and I'd fancy automating that with a script that...
I wanted to keep the title---and the question, for that matter---generic, but my use case is that I want to make a backup of my posts on Tildes, and I'd fancy automating that with a script that curls up my user page and downloads fresh stuff from there periodically. So for my personal case, the question is that is this allowed / welcome practice?
The generic question is that is it welcome to scrape Tildes' public pages, in general?
19 votes -
Tildistas, do you read or have you read any webcomics?
as an offshoot of this topic, i'm interested to see if any of you folks read/were previously big into webcomics. the last time we apparently had this question was about ten months ago and...
as an offshoot of this topic, i'm interested to see if any of you folks read/were previously big into webcomics. the last time we apparently had this question was about ten months ago and obviously the site's grown quite a bit since then, so i'm sure there will be plenty of new answers.
20 votes -
The monarch’s stupendous migration, dissected
5 votes -
End the tyranny of Arial: The big internet platforms use the same fonts and backgrounds. Let’s make it interesting again.
15 votes -
The rapid rise and slow fall of the Microsoft web browser
6 votes -
Long live the monarch
10 votes -
Edge-on-Chromium approaches; build leaks, extensions page already live
4 votes -
radicle - peer-to-peer source code repositories using IPFS (alpha)
8 votes -
Native File System API
6 votes -
Accessibility according to actual people with disabilities
6 votes -
Fighting uphill - the demoralizing state of accessibility on the web
8 votes -
Tim Berners-Lee: 'Stop web's downward plunge to dysfunctional future'
8 votes -
Extract clean(er), readable text from web pages via the Mercury Web Parser.
8 votes