Possibly not: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4869851/
There’s quite a few beaches in the UK, https://www.thebeachguide.co.uk/south-east-england/.
Their code is executing with a third party kernel, trusting that but not trusting the notification system which sits way above hierarchically seems like a very arbitrary delineation.
But it's so legible!
I've found that the best way to deal with this complexity is to ensure that any concurrent work is done in a fire-and-forget kind of style. Concurrent work is submitted to a IntentService (possible backed by a thread…
Do you have a source for that number?
Not made by the websites themselves but I think dashlane does something close to what you are asking for: https://www.dashlane.com/passwordchanger
They would also need access to the machine which you have your vault stored on which would be your laptop and your phone and nothing else.
It is certainly not FUD, see https://www.eff.org/cases/oracle-v-google The point is, Oracle have decided to sue once over usage of something they bought and may do so again in the future.
Spotify used to be fully native, nowadays the UI is done in various web technologies while the heavy lifting (streaming audio etc) is done in c++.
I imagine something like crouton[1] would come in handy for the CS students. 1. https://github.com/dnschneid/crouton
Any sources on that?
Surprisingly it was an okay experience in chrome for android. Only a broken top menu and a bit sluggish scrolling.
I use a password manager along with Syncthing[0] which seems to be the compromise you are looking for. This setup works well as long as your devices are decently often on a wifi that allows local device discovery (since…
What if preference is based on whatever makes you work the fastest? Or what if preference is based on objective, reproducible evaluation?
I'm curious as to why you think it is a bad experience?
Have you tried Reddit News [1] ? It has a very large button at the bottom of the screen that says "Sidebar" which will show you the subreddit sidebar. 1. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=reddit.news
Out of curiosity, do you have any examples or references to something with examples of sets that are neither open nor closed?
This is just me guessing but one of the initial goals of Dalvik was to use as little space as possible (due to memory constraints of hardware at that time). Perhaps they thought saving a a byte or two on method…
The Android version is going to need a lot of polish. The menu is jittery and the wrong icons are used. Also the whole app lacks touch feed back so there is no way of telling if you are pressing a button or not until…
Make more money perhaps, no source on whether or not well designed apps drive more revenue, just a guess.
Possibly not: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4869851/
There’s quite a few beaches in the UK, https://www.thebeachguide.co.uk/south-east-england/.
Their code is executing with a third party kernel, trusting that but not trusting the notification system which sits way above hierarchically seems like a very arbitrary delineation.
But it's so legible!
I've found that the best way to deal with this complexity is to ensure that any concurrent work is done in a fire-and-forget kind of style. Concurrent work is submitted to a IntentService (possible backed by a thread…
Do you have a source for that number?
Not made by the websites themselves but I think dashlane does something close to what you are asking for: https://www.dashlane.com/passwordchanger
They would also need access to the machine which you have your vault stored on which would be your laptop and your phone and nothing else.
It is certainly not FUD, see https://www.eff.org/cases/oracle-v-google The point is, Oracle have decided to sue once over usage of something they bought and may do so again in the future.
Spotify used to be fully native, nowadays the UI is done in various web technologies while the heavy lifting (streaming audio etc) is done in c++.
I imagine something like crouton[1] would come in handy for the CS students. 1. https://github.com/dnschneid/crouton
Any sources on that?
Surprisingly it was an okay experience in chrome for android. Only a broken top menu and a bit sluggish scrolling.
I use a password manager along with Syncthing[0] which seems to be the compromise you are looking for. This setup works well as long as your devices are decently often on a wifi that allows local device discovery (since…
What if preference is based on whatever makes you work the fastest? Or what if preference is based on objective, reproducible evaluation?
I'm curious as to why you think it is a bad experience?
Have you tried Reddit News [1] ? It has a very large button at the bottom of the screen that says "Sidebar" which will show you the subreddit sidebar. 1. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=reddit.news
Out of curiosity, do you have any examples or references to something with examples of sets that are neither open nor closed?
This is just me guessing but one of the initial goals of Dalvik was to use as little space as possible (due to memory constraints of hardware at that time). Perhaps they thought saving a a byte or two on method…
The Android version is going to need a lot of polish. The menu is jittery and the wrong icons are used. Also the whole app lacks touch feed back so there is no way of telling if you are pressing a button or not until…
Make more money perhaps, no source on whether or not well designed apps drive more revenue, just a guess.