on my firefox, on click, it switches to the tracking url (there's an onmousedown event). It does use the ping attribute on chrome.
There's another plant, Onagawa, which is closer to epicenter than either Fukushima and experienced bigger tsunami yet it survived just fine.
>but on BSD and its variants like MacOS, the session ID isn’t present or always zero Don't know about macOS, but session ID/pointer does present on FreeBSD and OpenBSD.
Here's difference between airpods and plastic bottles: > They can’t be repaired because they're glued together. They can’t be thrown out, or else the lithium-ion battery may start a fire in the garbage compactor. They…
Not supporting it means sites without tracking have better user experience. Now tracking is natively supported, everyone can just start doing tracking without any of the disadvantages.
Well, technically it solves to x = z when y <> 0 and any x, z when y = 0 though I'm not sure if that's the original intention.
Sorry, is it xz + yz = x(y + z) when using operators? That seems wrong.
on my firefox, on click, it switches to the tracking url (there's an onmousedown event). It does use the ping attribute on chrome.
There's another plant, Onagawa, which is closer to epicenter than either Fukushima and experienced bigger tsunami yet it survived just fine.
>but on BSD and its variants like MacOS, the session ID isn’t present or always zero Don't know about macOS, but session ID/pointer does present on FreeBSD and OpenBSD.
Here's difference between airpods and plastic bottles: > They can’t be repaired because they're glued together. They can’t be thrown out, or else the lithium-ion battery may start a fire in the garbage compactor. They…
Not supporting it means sites without tracking have better user experience. Now tracking is natively supported, everyone can just start doing tracking without any of the disadvantages.
Well, technically it solves to x = z when y <> 0 and any x, z when y = 0 though I'm not sure if that's the original intention.
Sorry, is it xz + yz = x(y + z) when using operators? That seems wrong.