True, but if their mirroring system had been more robust in checking corruption, they would've had an every 20 minutes backup.
Sounds like the advertising campaigns have worked so well on you, you don't even realise it.
Yes, event.altKey would seem a better choice as it maps to Alt on Windows and Option on the Mac. Not sure about Chromebooks (which don't even have any modifier keys other than Shift) or Linux though. Or mobile browsers.
Works fine to detect the inspection window, but a false positive (as "open and docked") if I change Chrome window state from maximised to normal.
No problem, it's been fun playing with it :) Two more issues: http://i.imgur.com/uBpTr0m.png - somehow managed to get two links superimposed ("meteor" and "j"), and moving blocks of links took a rather long time.
I like this notion of the desktop metaphor being extended to bookmarks. Actually I was quite disappointed to see that Google missed this trick with their new Chromebooks, preferring to stuff app links into a bar at the…
True, but if their mirroring system had been more robust in checking corruption, they would've had an every 20 minutes backup.
Sounds like the advertising campaigns have worked so well on you, you don't even realise it.
Yes, event.altKey would seem a better choice as it maps to Alt on Windows and Option on the Mac. Not sure about Chromebooks (which don't even have any modifier keys other than Shift) or Linux though. Or mobile browsers.
Works fine to detect the inspection window, but a false positive (as "open and docked") if I change Chrome window state from maximised to normal.
No problem, it's been fun playing with it :) Two more issues: http://i.imgur.com/uBpTr0m.png - somehow managed to get two links superimposed ("meteor" and "j"), and moving blocks of links took a rather long time.
I like this notion of the desktop metaphor being extended to bookmarks. Actually I was quite disappointed to see that Google missed this trick with their new Chromebooks, preferring to stuff app links into a bar at the…