I was able to enable it on stable by toggling browser.urlbar.showSearchTerms.featureGate
Edit: Nevermind, it doesn't work for custom engines, which suggests that it's a separate implementation from mobile?
It is different from carbon credits. I don't think you get a rebate from not emitting. If the cost is passed onto the consumer when there are good alternatives with less carbon, they will be out-competed. One thing with few alternatives is transportation, which low-income households tend to spend more on.
I've changed this on all my terminals and I'm not ashamed of it.
If you intended RFC to be a reference to IETF RFCs you should now it originally stood for Requests for Comments before simply being referred to as RFCs. (link) I didn't have to read your document in detail, but it seems reasonable and well thought out.
At first I thought it was something about it being a worst case scenario for compression algorithms, costing bandwidth.
I think bandwidth and data caps are a hindrance to this. Looking on the bright side, at least something would have to be better in this dystopian future.
Got this by using "force RTL layout direction for all locales" in Android developer options:
So that's the only meaning of the teletubby and the angry looks, that's it's the odd one out? Not that it's childish/naive/dumb or bad?
Yes, there's a B after the name in the web interface.
Nobody has said that they are working on it on GitHub.
It tries to subscribe to the one on lemmy.world as well as the most subscribed one on any instance according to lemmy.world.
.bibisco2 are really just zip files which PhotoRec can find, if you want to use that. Good luck.
Bibisco2 is a JavaScript app, unlike version 1. It seems .bibisco2 files are only created when exported, otherwise it's in a database somewhere. You can add custom formats in recovery tools like TestDisk and Photorec. I could look around and see if the database or the bibisco2 export files have a header, which I think is required to add a format.
Edit: Nevermind, there's a paid version which creates bibisco2 files automatically.
/u/snowe@programming.dev You can also subscribe to this GitHub issue to be notified of progress.
That's not a new way to change data, it's reading it.
I think they mean anything where changes happen without your input, because you might see it in your corner of your eye, whereas reference material can be switched to almost as fast as you can look to the side. Typing as you're reading though...
For legal issues that are not EU-specific you may also want to take inspiration from this instance.
I imagine the types of actions you'll do is similar to what can be seen in sh.itjust.works/modlog . It'll be less work in the beginning when you have only a few users, but no one's gonna blame you if you stop. Well maybe you'd want to pass the torch to someone first.