Okay nice, I really like the suggestion here. I had heard about containers in Firefox but never actually looked into them, so will do.
Unfortunately I can’t get rid of Chrome completely since a web app I have to use requires Chrome (for whatever reason, it’s a bit predatory if you ask me).
The summers are great just due to the increased number of daylight hours. I used to live in Fairbanks and that would have been ideal, but the summers up there are plagued with wildfire smoke which greatly affects solar potential.
Yeah I'll have to look into the engineering of the seismic stations. I reckon their panels are all placed in the perfect spots. I'm just unsure at the moment what kind of living accommodations I'm going to have up there.
I just checked all of these with incognito tabs to make sure none of my cookies were effecting behavior. They all do not open in new tabs or windows by default. So I'm not sure what you're on about. Tested in Firefox.
Almost no service I've ever used opens in a new tab or window by default, so it makes sense if we're talking about it in that sense. Middle-mouse button opens in a new tab though instead of a new window. Though the argument about accessibility falls apart if you make it a setting that is not default and is specific to the user.
Batteries, solar panels (the ones that they have), and their server (which is just a small raspberry pi) could all probably be shipped in an average sized box. Don't take my word for it though, the owner has worked through this mentally as well:
That's awesome. This type of project would work great for me currently since I live in a part of the US with the highest solar potential, but next year I'm moving to Alaska. This would affect uptime in the winter months for sure.
I'll be the first to admit that I had no idea that any of this was happening. That's definitely why I come to Lemmy though. Important topics get posted all the time, as opposed to fluff/low-quality content.
Just wanted to say thanks for this, I learned something today. It's a tragedy what's going on in Northern Syria. RiC reports sound like something out of a nightmare...
There does appear to be some software that can recover the overwritten data. Data that gets deleted during a factory reset is just marked for overwriting, usually. The thing is, a lot of these tools (minitool, gihosoft mobile recovery, recoverit) usually cost money and are all closed source.
Those are just some of the tools i pulled off a quick google search, so your mileage may vary.
If the article/post is thought-provoking enough to make me want to comment, then I typically don't read others' comments first. Not because I want to avoid some bias, though that seems to be the case so thanks for pointing that out, but because I'm just eager.
Okay nice, I really like the suggestion here. I had heard about containers in Firefox but never actually looked into them, so will do.
Unfortunately I can’t get rid of Chrome completely since a web app I have to use requires Chrome (for whatever reason, it’s a bit predatory if you ask me).