I see, somehow completely forgot that apps might be different. In browser version in landscape (I just noticed) there's also the right sidebar, which reserves some space. So it wouldn't even have to go all the way.
bellsDoSing
I hope we're all talking about portrait orientation. Oh boy, filling it up in landscape mode seems a daunting task. °!°
Alright, looks like 40% filled up on my screen atm.
Oh, it's still going!
Nah, one is enough. ^^ Curiosity got the better of me thinking about how squished the UI might end up looking.
Let the streak continue...
Great read, certainly had more relatable things in there than I'd expected.
Yeah, such a simple, but still killer feature. Really sad that JSON doesn't support them.
Yeah, basically anything that rewrites already pushed history and is then (force-) push is bound to create problems (unless it's a solo dev only ever coding on a single device, who uses the remote repo as a mere backup solution).
Great explanation indeed!
I was missing this part from my understanding:
The certificate correctly identifies the website (e.g., when the browser visits "https://example.com", the received certificate is properly for "example.com" and not some other entity).
In a sense it all comes down to a CA (e.g let's encrypt) not giving out certificates for your domain, so that only your server has a valid certificate for your domain and not also some attacker.
But that itself requires domain verification to be secure (robust against MITM attacks), which apparently it wasn't for the longest time.
Just recently there was a post about ACME-CAA
, which addresses this issue (when configured). Great article on it here: https://www.devever.net/~hl/acme-caa-live
On top of that, 20 kHz is quite the theoretical upper limit.
Most people, be it due to aging (affects all of us) or due to behaviour (some way more than others), can't hear that far up anyway. Most people would be suprised how high up even e.g. 17 kHz is. Sounds a lot closer to very high pitched "hissing" or "shimmer", not something that's considered "tonal".
So yeah, saying "oh no, let me have my precious 30 kHz" really is questionable.
At least when it comes to listening to finished music files. The validity of higher sampling frequencies during various stages in the audio production process is a different, way less questionable topic,
Nice, bit over half way point here.