I admit: the blood pressure monitoring on the Apple Watch is tempting, *if it works*. I have a home blood pressure monitor, and it works fine—when I remember to use it, which isn't often enough.
But again, not with Apple's current political stances.
Your bird friend Coral, a library web developer and systems administrator, working remotely. Runs (despite their best efforts) on caffeine and rage.
#CovidIsntOver so mask up!
| Website | https://sheldon-hess.org/coral |
| Current location | Maine, USA |
| GitHub | https://github.com/csheldonhess |
@coral That's a great point. "Might" is definitely not enough to get my money.
(I don't have a strong need; it mostly makes my doctors less fussy about virtual appointments if they know I'm tracking it myself.)
I admit: the blood pressure monitoring on the Apple Watch is tempting, *if it works*. I have a home blood pressure monitor, and it works fine—when I remember to use it, which isn't often enough.
But again, not with Apple's current political stances.
Ahaha!! In Firefox, there's a "Fonts" tab. https://devtoolstips.org/tips/en/list-used-fonts/
(I'm using Vivaldi for 90% of my web browsing these days, but I keep a copy of Firefox for these kinds of issues. And also for its containers.)
Does anyone know of a browser plugin (or any other tool) that can list *every font* used on a web page?
(I know about Developer Tools. I can go through and identify each font as I see it, provided I recognize that it's a different font. But we have two sans serif fonts in play that look too similar to me.)
As I'm bashing my way through some CSS overrides for a vendor product, I find myself reflecting on that time my whole team was like, "look, I will go with whatever formatting standard we decide on as a group, but my personal preference is ___" — and that "___" part just happened to match between all three of us.
It's nice working with folks who are objectively correct, in addition to being delightful people.
This is such a great "he's a little confused, but he's got the spirit" kind of thing that one of my LibGuide authors did. Like … is it accessible like this? No.
But I totally see how they got there, while trying to do the right thing.
Out of all these issues, obviously the only really bad one is the one with no workaround: some guides are simultaneously there and not there.
I was 90+% sure they hadn't been deleted, but the first step Springshare Support asked me to take was to look for them in the Guide Backup area, where deleted guides show up. They were not there.
They also had me look (again — I'd sent them a screenshot, which they acknowledged, it's cool) at my redirects list. Which wouldn't affect the "edit" view.