Let me tell you this “funny” story of me trying to bypass a domain check in a little webapp, and acidentally bypassing a URL parser that is used in (almost) every Google product.
I can't wait for VLC to be sued because we can paste the URL of a pirated show stored on a shared FTP server. /s
So now there’s an item that allows you to wear a paper bag on your head, which is cool, but I have a pressing question. If I give this to a villager as a gift, are they capable of wearing it? Can I force them — particularly, my mortal enemy who is clogging up my island with their unwanted presence — to wear the paper bag in an effort to make them leave?
On April 1st, Switzerland's new copyright law will go into effect. The new legislation incorporates many recommendations from copyright holders, including a “stay-down” provision. Not all wishes were granted, however, as site-blocking is off-limits and downloading will remain legal. The country hopes that the changes will nonetheless warrant a removal from the U.S. pirate watchlist.
Numbers are one of the most commonly asked for pieces of data, typically used in dates. We know from user research that some users prefer the large buttoned number keyboard (resembling a telephone keypad) for entering numbers on mobile. Until now, the GOV.UK Design System date input component used the HTML element
<input type=”number”>to provide this number keypad when a user enters dates.
Malgré les nombreuses annulations de ses confrères causées par la peur du Covid-19, le studio chinois miHoYo a fait le déplacement au salon PAX East de Boston pour présenter une nouvelle démo jouable de Genshin Impact, son action-RPG en monde ouvert dont IGN Japan nous montre ici la démo tournant sur PC.
Pokémon Go added a new pokéstop to commemorate the late Desmond Amofah, better known as YouTube personality Etika. On Twitter, Reversal — a Netherlands-based YouTuber who’s been campaigning for a pokéstop for Etika since last year — posted an image of the new spot. “Remembering the passing of Etika, JoyconBoyz forever,” the description reads.
It’s a pretty wild idea. Amazon’s patent shows the whip attached to a marine vehicle (read: a boat) via a winch at one end and an “aerial vehicle” carrying the payload on another. Along the whip is a series of additional aerial vehicles that help generate the whip waveform and could also draw power via the whip itself.