Lenovo stopped the whitelusting with the 50 Models. I tried two internal wifi m2 ngff cards that are not listed as compatible in my x260 and both were working.
I'm using https://iridiumbrowser.de
It is not. If their customers are in the EU they have to to comply.
...which is not compliant. "Opt out everywhere" has to be the default when you click accept. But for version 2 of GDPR I'd like to see something like: No landing pages. Content must be served on the first request. And…
Look here at web interfaces and news... there are quite a few gems: http://gopher.floodgap.com/gopher/gw?gopher://bitreich.org:7...
Making gopher even faster is probably a challenge worth a talk :)
Wow, there is a whole gopher community again! That's amazing!
Clickbait title. The actual title is "Tips to improve your online marketing campaign."
I remember that they bloated up their client so much with menu bars, icons and later ads that it was not snappy anymore and required a lot of memory. So people where looking for alternatives.
This didn't happen in the last years. I doubt it will happen at all. I think they're more interested in the algorithms to reuse them in Google Apps the one or the other way.
Lenovo stopped the whitelusting with the 50 Models. I tried two internal wifi m2 ngff cards that are not listed as compatible in my x260 and both were working.
I'm using https://iridiumbrowser.de
It is not. If their customers are in the EU they have to to comply.
...which is not compliant. "Opt out everywhere" has to be the default when you click accept. But for version 2 of GDPR I'd like to see something like: No landing pages. Content must be served on the first request. And…
Look here at web interfaces and news... there are quite a few gems: http://gopher.floodgap.com/gopher/gw?gopher://bitreich.org:7...
Making gopher even faster is probably a challenge worth a talk :)
Wow, there is a whole gopher community again! That's amazing!
Clickbait title. The actual title is "Tips to improve your online marketing campaign."
I remember that they bloated up their client so much with menu bars, icons and later ads that it was not snappy anymore and required a lot of memory. So people where looking for alternatives.
This didn't happen in the last years. I doubt it will happen at all. I think they're more interested in the algorithms to reuse them in Google Apps the one or the other way.