I’m making a note here:
I’m making a note here:
I always listen to my parents’ kid.
The difference is just whether the client app gets notified of new messages/replies by asking the server “Is there anything new?” on a set schedule (pull), or if the server sends the notification “Here’s something new!” only when there is a new one (push).
Yep. I’m not sure if OP was looking for technically-pull clients specifically, though I have to imagine conventional notifications are a basic feature even on iOS.
Checking at a regular interval is “pull” (not push) though. Push means the client keeps a low-bandwidth connection to the server open so the server can notify the client as soon as something has happened.
I don’t doubt it exists, but I’m kind of curious about workflows that still involve burning optical media in 2024.
Baby’s first steam hammer.
they can’t really leave their car in the middle of the street to come assaulting me
I’d be careful, I’ve had this happen twice.
Yeah, I feel like what that insight “means” is in the eye of the beholder. It’s definitely not great in the context of the original song either, but it’s a bit less in-your-face.
I think these characterizations point very strongly toward nostalgic longing and away from the glorification of addiction or even that of drug use.
There’s also an extra verse, which wasn’t in the radio edit, that I think further supports what you’re saying.
For what it’s worth, that line is a sample from an Ultramagnetic MCs song.
Found the Slashdotter.
Implementing this like Gmail would mean doing it server-side. Handling it in the client would be more error-prone, since your device would have to have a good connection in the future, and if it doesn’t, handle retries and make sure never to double-post.
“Design language” is, without a doubt, a thing. It’s a metaphor, and a pretty apt one. Curious to hear what you think of programming languages.
Image used to sell DRM-free issues through the late Comixology, so I ended up reading more of those for a while.
Yeah. I found that post after I, too, was banned.
Relevant discussion: !Linuxsucks@lemmy.world mod silently bans people from their community for disagreeing, and tries to hide the comments from being seen in the modlog.
“Free, efficient, no bullshit” is kind of the default for Linux software.