The URLS would be different. Companies also rewrite internal links as you're navigating a site to accomplish the same thing. Example: https://baycloud.com/thirdparty-redirect
It's cookies and the change isn't really earth shattering but it does close the "redirection trick" loophole that some companies were using to track you across domains. See my example here for more specific details:…
Looks like this will stop (after 24 hours) some companies from doing an initial redirection to set cookies for tracking purposes... Example: 1. Search Google for hockey sticks 2. Click on search result hockeystick.com…
This. I think this is going to be really bad for the web. Next year, we will all be screaming when we see more of "If you want to read this article and much more, download our App!"
So this is like a Carousel for sets of <tr>'s in a table? Seems like a neat idea but on Chrome 42 (64-bit) OSX 10 scrolling fast with the trackpad causes the entire page to scroll. I assume it's because scrolling has…
Cool but haven't we seen this before? IMO, something really groundbreaking is numecent's cloudpaging[0] technology. Have a look. [0] http://www.numecent.com/technology/cloudpaging.html
I remember seeing something similar to this a while back called Diffable http://googlediffable.blogspot.com/. Looks like the same thing but maybe I'm wrong... Still cool though.
The URLS would be different. Companies also rewrite internal links as you're navigating a site to accomplish the same thing. Example: https://baycloud.com/thirdparty-redirect
It's cookies and the change isn't really earth shattering but it does close the "redirection trick" loophole that some companies were using to track you across domains. See my example here for more specific details:…
Looks like this will stop (after 24 hours) some companies from doing an initial redirection to set cookies for tracking purposes... Example: 1. Search Google for hockey sticks 2. Click on search result hockeystick.com…
This. I think this is going to be really bad for the web. Next year, we will all be screaming when we see more of "If you want to read this article and much more, download our App!"
So this is like a Carousel for sets of <tr>'s in a table? Seems like a neat idea but on Chrome 42 (64-bit) OSX 10 scrolling fast with the trackpad causes the entire page to scroll. I assume it's because scrolling has…
Cool but haven't we seen this before? IMO, something really groundbreaking is numecent's cloudpaging[0] technology. Have a look. [0] http://www.numecent.com/technology/cloudpaging.html
I remember seeing something similar to this a while back called Diffable http://googlediffable.blogspot.com/. Looks like the same thing but maybe I'm wrong... Still cool though.