You keep using Lastpass? If so, why?
> only usable by Safari users doesn't seem to be profitable at all. Why is that? According to [1] Safari has 14% market share. Just the desktop version has 5%. [1] http://gs.statcounter.com/browser-market-share
I think Gentoo scales very easy. Especially in enterprises. One thing I like about Gentoo that no other mainstream distro has is something like this https://packages.gentoo.org/packages/net-proxy/haproxy. That page says…
The irony. The original site loads instantly without JS but the amp one takes longer to load and will not display anything (also without JS).
> give an option to change my location Don't we all? It's called teleportation.
The real result will be that kids will be educated by devices instead being educated by their parents.
HTTP/2 push is totally the problem browsers have today. Not the damn CPU usage, not the enormous RAM consumption.
I bought an IPv6 router 3-4 years ago.
Red Hat refused the project initially.
So what features don't work for you?
> How long before we see adblockers [...] and basically anything that a company like google will see as a threat get blocked. They're already blocked on Android Chrome browser.
In such cases I always compare 'curl -I site' with the affected browser console.
You keep using Lastpass? If so, why?
> only usable by Safari users doesn't seem to be profitable at all. Why is that? According to [1] Safari has 14% market share. Just the desktop version has 5%. [1] http://gs.statcounter.com/browser-market-share
I think Gentoo scales very easy. Especially in enterprises. One thing I like about Gentoo that no other mainstream distro has is something like this https://packages.gentoo.org/packages/net-proxy/haproxy. That page says…
The irony. The original site loads instantly without JS but the amp one takes longer to load and will not display anything (also without JS).
> give an option to change my location Don't we all? It's called teleportation.
The real result will be that kids will be educated by devices instead being educated by their parents.
HTTP/2 push is totally the problem browsers have today. Not the damn CPU usage, not the enormous RAM consumption.
I bought an IPv6 router 3-4 years ago.
Red Hat refused the project initially.
So what features don't work for you?
> How long before we see adblockers [...] and basically anything that a company like google will see as a threat get blocked. They're already blocked on Android Chrome browser.
In such cases I always compare 'curl -I site' with the affected browser console.