This is fantastic. Been waiting for this for years.
Had to jump into the Web app to see if it was really there, and it was and worked just like they said it would.
This is fantastic. Been waiting for this for years.
Had to jump into the Web app to see if it was really there, and it was and worked just like they said it would.
Maybe the fact you have to be there and read it while connected is the secret sauce to prove that it’s a “real” library, meaning they have a fixed number of copies (max players connected to the server at any given time) and that helps them get protected the same way a real library is?
That’s perfectly fine for some things, but for most people letting their browser choice dictate what sites they use is backwards
It’s ok to think recall is invasive and bad for privacy, but it isn’t even released yet. If you’re gonna hate something and drag it through the mud, do it for real and valid reasons.
I’ve reluctantly come to the same conclusion.
Until proven otherwise, I’d assume the worst. They know your identity to travel, and they link it with profiles from all the major ad networks.
I don’t know about McDonald’s abroad, as I’ve never had it out of country, but here state side McDonald’s isn’t even fast anymore. It used to be fast, cheap, and acceptable, but they’ve given up fast and cheap and it’s really only acceptable now.
Still faster than most sit down restaurants, but nowhere near what it was in terms of speed ten years ago.
Did you forget the ./s or something? Lemmy itself is developed on GitHub, as are plenty of other “valuable” open source projects. To pretend nothing of value is built there is putting your head in the sand.
If you’re developing software on GitHub you have a chance at getting some useful feedback, bug reports and maybe even PRs. Like it or not, the network effect is real.
What websites? I use Firefox as my daily driver on desktop and mobile, and I rarely run into problems. Like so infrequently that I don’t even remember the last time.
This whole problem could be avoided by running the API on the grill itself, fully locally on the lan.
Seems like the grill is a dumb client that polls the cloud API to determine what action to take, and then the phone app pushes commands to the cloud for the grill.
An overly complicated setup that only forces you into their walled garden.