JRT

@jrt
13 Followers
51 Following
61 Posts
This is the backup-account of the Cyberian from the Cyberlands.
I do something with #Cyber.
Totally not CyBär!
@[email protected] sounds like the theory of valve financially supporting dxvk development is true.
Cool, #FreeNAS hat jetzt einen Theme Editor für die neue WebGUI.
These books remembered me of #Android and I had to rearrange them correctly.

Bei #trenitalia braucht man für das "free WiFi" seine Handynummer, Kredit Kartennummer (inklusive Prüfziffer und Ablaufdatum), email, Vor- und Nachname, Land.
Alles über HTTP Formular.
#Datenschutz und #Privatsphäre ist für die ein Fremdwort.

Einmal mit #DSGVO Profis arbeiten! Eigentlich ein Fall für den Datenschutzbeauftragten.🤨

#GDPR

@datenkanal umatrix und https everywhere, aber in der Regel in Chromium
Just submitted a lightning talk about the @fdroidorg ecosystem for the @nextcloud conference in Berlin on 25th/26th of August.
@[email protected] gerootet? Ich hab das unter einem grooteten Gerät am laufen ohne Probleme. Gibt allerdings ein zwei Tricks die man beachten sollte.

lol, amp. i noticed that a page would suddenly appear after 8 seconds of waiting if i disabled js, which seemed pretty weird.

turns out that there's a css3 anim to hide the page for 8 full seconds (that is skipped when the js loads ofc).

this is *required* by the amp standard. your page fails validation if you don't do this.

sure makes these goog results look kinda suspicious, huh

@cent @quad works for me ™
I think I disagree with all of the points made in this article.

https://techcrunch.com/2018/04/07/rss-is-undead

RSS doesn't need more machine learning. It doesn't need "algorithms". It doesn't need a business model. It doesn't need to be friendly towards tracking and monitoring user behavior. It absolutely shouldn't care about branding.

Really RSS should just be about reading, and nothing else. The client can do fancy processing of feeds, but the protocol doesn't need to care about that.
RSS is undead

RSS died. Whether you blame Feedburner, or Google Reader, or Digg Reader last month, or any number of other product failures over the years, the humble protocol has managed to keep on trudging along despite all evidence that it is dead, dead, dead. Now, with Facebook’s scandal over Cambridge Analyt…

TechCrunch