I know it's not the point of the article, but the responsiveness example with the accordion opening sucks. Why hide the answers in the first place?
hascat
This is a great tool. I landed on Jetbrains mono with Ubuntu mono in second place. I've been using the latter for many years so it's interesting to find something I like better.
it’s all the more frustrating when you see a company dedicating resources to shutting them down.
Yes, definitely sucks when they do that. I struggle to understand why unless there's some legal reason to protect all of your intellectual property instead of just the stuff that's still making money.
The app may be closed-source, but the data is all markdown, which should be easy to move to other apps.
The reason they don’t re-release video games or old movies is because they don’t want you enjoying old things.
You're assuming nefarious intent. I suspect the reality is that it's not worth the rights holders' time or money to invest in re-releasing old titles that very few people would buy.
The recommendation to make small, focused changes and commit frequently are good practices for using git as well. Any changes a developer has locally are effectively a branch, so I don't see much of a difference between the two approaches, at least in the context of this article.
Tetris is an interesting one because you've got 3+ decades of variations on the original, but the original is still the best. I'd argue it's a perfect game.
I think OP is going to have a tough time finding an email provider which won't comply with court orders
I like these cats
We force browser refresh if the front end detects the back end has had breaking changes. We attempt to re-populate form field values.
Do users not find this disruptive?
Stealth was necessary in the early chapters of Death Stranding. As you get access to better equipment it becomes less necessary, but the early game was definitely the most stressful stealth experience I think I've had in gaming.