-
7 votes
-
RIAA obtains DMCA subpoenas against Cloudflare and Namecheap targeting forty-one domains for YouTube-ripping platforms and pirate sites
29 votes -
Website design trends you’ll want to know about and try in 2020 and beyond
6 votes -
Helping people spot the spoofs: a URL experiment
7 votes -
Archie Comics to partner with Webtoon for new online comics
5 votes -
The Adventures of Fallacy Man
4 votes -
Recommend a self-host, open source URL Shortener
At my day job at a non-for-profit, I direct the digital services and platforms (among other things). One thing that I've seen in my org. is the widespread use of the Bitly URL shortener (free...
At my day job at a non-for-profit, I direct the digital services and platforms (among other things). One thing that I've seen in my org. is the widespread use of the Bitly URL shortener (free plan/tier) for the sharing of our many online and offline campaigns. The myriad departments in the org. for the most part operate quite autonomously, though I can influence the use of digital platforms (at least the majority of the time). I'd like to get away from using Bitly. Would anyone kindly recommend alternatives to Bitly? Self-host and open source options would be preferred, but not required if the price is right (read: low enough for a non-profit).
I've used YOURLs many years ago, and it worked great; did everything that I needed and was straight-forward to install and use. (The only cost was a cheap $5/month Digital Ocean droplet, that I happened to run other things on too.) However, I have also heard of - but never used - the following other options:
So...Are any of the above worth considering (or avoiding)? Are there any other, perhaps better alternatives not listed here? I'd appreciate any suggestions and recommendations! Thanks in advanced!
4 votes -
Web history - Chapter 4: Search
4 votes -
Breaking up is hard to do: Chrome Web Browser separates from Chrome OS
11 votes -
What the internet could be
18 votes -
makesite.py - Simple, lightweight, and magic-free static site/blog generator
7 votes -
Official Mozilla statement about the future of MDN Web Docs
24 votes -
Shared Piano - A Chrome experiment
4 votes -
You want to see my data? I thought we were friends
18 votes -
CyberBunker: The "bulletproof web hosting" company based in a German Cold War bunker that became a dark-web empire
10 votes -
The rise and fall of Adobe Flash
10 votes -
The future of online identity is decentralized
11 votes -
State of the Keybase.io website
8 votes -
Thinking about opening a web store, looking for advice
I am mulling over starting a side business that would involve selling physical products. I would like to set up a web store for this, but want to keep the amount of web development I have to do to...
I am mulling over starting a side business that would involve selling physical products. I would like to set up a web store for this, but want to keep the amount of web development I have to do to a minimum. I would also not like to invade my customers' and potential customers' privacy. Can anyone recommend a way to approach this? I'm a software developer, but don't do much web development and don't really want to do development for this project beyond just getting the site up and running. What options exist for setting up a simple web store?
I've done a search and see things like Shopify. I've heard of them and get the impression they're reputable, but other items in my search seemed kind of scammy. Are there things I should look out for in this space?
8 votes -
Chrome now supports linking to "Text Fragments", which will automatically scroll to and highlight specific text on a page
7 votes -
Death and surrender to power in the clothing of men
10 votes -
Godot Editor running in a web browser
9 votes -
DuckDuckGo now crawls the web regularly to create a free list of trackers to block
21 votes -
Godot Editor running in a web browser
8 votes -
Min: a minimalist web browser
20 votes -
“Core Web Vitals” replaces AMP as requirement for Top Stories module
16 votes -
Now is a great time to start reading Gunnerkrigg Court
5 votes -
Celebrating ten years of WebM and WebRTC
6 votes -
Beaker Browser 1.0 Beta
25 votes -
Pushbullet: Let's guess what Google requires in fourteen days or they kill our extension
19 votes -
The Beaker "new web" project
10 votes -
moderncss.dev - A series examining modern CSS solutions to old CSS problems
15 votes -
How to use your DSLR or mirrorless camera as a webcam
8 votes -
The real impact of an open redirect vulnerability
4 votes -
This is a web page
37 votes -
How to encourage clicks without the shady tricks
3 votes -
Python web scraping with virtual private networks
3 votes -
password, the typing game, has been updated
Play it now. Alternatively, visit the repo. password has been updated to v1.1: the game now starts after you press [Space] you gain points for victories (score is not saved between reloads) UI is...
Alternatively, visit the repo.
passwordhas been updated to v1.1:- the game now starts after you press
[Space] - you gain points for victories (score is not saved between reloads)
- UI is a little nicer
v1.2 planned features:
- adjustable difficulty, via either or both of password length and time per round
- zen mode: longer rounds, no score tracking, calmer UI
- persistent personal high score you can compete against
I almost feel like this is not worth an update, but people have been curious and supportive of the game.
You can see all planned features in the issues section. Suggestions on gameplay and visuals are welcome.
EDIT: updated hosted version to not reset score on loss (only resets when you start over).
13 votes - the game now starts after you press
-
Microsoft Edge is now second most popular desktop browser, beats Firefox; Chrome at 68% market share
18 votes -
Webcam hacking—The story of how I gained unauthorized Camera access on iOS and macOS
4 votes -
The web is a customer service medium
5 votes -
Eight marvelous and melancholy things I've learned about creativity
6 votes -
Inspired design decisions with Otto Storch: When idea, copy, art and typography became inseparable
4 votes -
The reckless, infinite scope of web browsers
17 votes -
Notes on auth token persistence
5 votes -
Facebook files lawsuit against Namecheap
9 votes -
Why the world needs CSS developers
6 votes -
Pepper & Carrot open source comic book publishing report # 3
11 votes -
Fixing memory leaks in web applications
6 votes -
Why JavaScript is eating HTML
33 votes