When you do a rewrite you want to create the same product as before just with better code / architecture. That’s not what Wayland tries to do.
When you do a rewrite you want to create the same product as before just with better code / architecture. That’s not what Wayland tries to do.
But there is a separator between the numbers: the same one that also very reliably separates the words in this comment
To me it seems pretty clear: withholding means you don’t get your mail delivered and cannot fetch it yourself at the post office, while “not delivering” means just that: you don’t get your mail delivered.
There’s a lot of open source browsers out there. Would you use one if it doesn’t have […] mandatory extensions?
There are literally only chromium-based browsers and Firefox (and its forks) with any meaningful market share. Developing a new browser engine is extremely complicated and time consuming, so there really is no danger of having “too many” browsers. And of course all browsers based on chromium (Google Chrome, Edge, Vivaldi, Brave, …) support the same set of extensions, because they use the same engine. So extension compatibility is also not a problem.
Supporting the gazillion ever-changing web technologies and standards and layout systems for a completly new browser is a problem though.
Honestly I would probably not use it. One if the most important things I’m looking for in an API is reliability - and a project that has no financing is really just waiting to have its plug pulled.
You might be highly motivated right now to keep it going for many years. But without a steady income it might just be a burden to keep it going at some point.
(Nothing personally obviously, I don’t know you and wish you all the best!)
Yeah it’s mind-boggling that not even Google is providing helpful changelogs for their Android apps in their own app store.
Yeah those communities are wild. Before I bought my own printer I thought 3D printing is mostly fixing your printer and buying better parts and bed leveling and tuning etc.
Wasn’t looking forward to it so I bought an off-the-shelf printer with minimal assembly from a “boring” Chinese brand - couldn’t be happier with it, it just prints without any hassle and I have no urge to switch firmwares or tinker with the printer itself instead of with the printed stuff. To each their own I guess.
(Still plugged in a raspberry pi for octoprint and did some initial calibration for the filament of course …)