- Dec 2023
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www.youtube.com www.youtube.com
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if I find a great YouTube video, I click the Reader browser plugin, and it's collected in Reader's video view. Why use Reader to watch this video? Because if the video has subtitles, these subtitle texts will be displayed like an article, scrolling along with the playback progress. And you can highlight them like you would in an article, take notes, and use AI functions. If you're watching a video in English, you can use Reader's AI feature for translation and explanation, which is great for language learning.
喜歡!
Reader統一了各種不同格式來源的內容的劃線註記動作,讓人專注在內容,而非格式。
下一步:能支援YouTube以外的video,以及audio?
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- Jun 2023
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healthyselfesteem.org healthyselfesteem.org
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We live in a society that emphasizes glamour and sex appeal. That is why most of us strive to achieve external beauty, but oftentimes we lose our uniqueness in the process.
so this passage explicitly mentions "external beauty", BUT if we're to consider beauty in its truest essence, then i wonder if this statement is a bad thing. after all, beauty is essentially harmony and balance (which explains why individuals with symmetrical features are considered attractive). all of us strive for beauty, but in doing so, we may lose what makes us unique because beauty favors uniformity.
this is fascinating to me because uniformity adheres to a standard, which is important for regulating randomness (opposite of this is pattern and we LOVE patterns because it is discernible which means it is safer), and fostering a shared understanding of the world. and this shared understanding of our world is really important to us as humanity. this is how we evolve together. this collective perception only happens through that concept of beauty (or form and structure, harmony and balance).
nowadays, we shifted and value individualism more. this excessive individualism has promoted different perspectives on the world which contributes to conflicts. ultimately, extremes on both ends of the spectrum (uniformity or individualism) are detrimental, so striking this balance between them is crucial for progress and unity among people.
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- May 2022
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github.com github.com
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I think RSpec should provide around(:context)/around(:all). Not because of any particular use case, but simply for API consistency. It's much simpler to tell users "there are 3 kinds of hooks (before, after and around) and each can be used with any of 3 scopes (example, context and suite)". Having some kinds of hooks work with only some kinds of scopes makes the API inconsistent and forces us to add special case code to emit warnings and also write extra documentation for this fact.
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I've been thinking of looking into implementing this in rspec-core, primarily to make the API more consistent (e.g. so that you can combine any scope -- example/context/suite -- with any hook type before/after/around).
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- Jun 2021
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developer.mozilla.org developer.mozilla.org
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The globalThis property provides a standard way of accessing the global this value (and hence the global object itself) across environments. Unlike similar properties such as window and self, it's guaranteed to work in window and non-window contexts. In this way, you can access the global object in a consistent manner without having to know which environment the code is being run in.
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- Mar 2021
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bugs.ruby-lang.org bugs.ruby-lang.org
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If this is okay, then it might even be nice if #dig took a block as well as a fallback value: [].dig(1) { 'default' } #=> "default"
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www.sitepoint.com www.sitepoint.com
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Trying to force this one thing to work for everyone is the worst way to do that.
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Don’t get me wrong — standards are great. Uniformity is bad.
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- Dec 2020
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www.quora.com www.quora.com
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Many non-Greeks adopted Gteek lifestyles, language and habits after the age of Alexander, but the cross-pollination was more frequently cultural than political.
More of a focus on IDENTIFYING as greek, as opposed to being TOLD that you are now roman, etc.
more of a colonization concept than assimilation
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he Romans assimilated far more people into their institutional lives.
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dominating its neighbors and then assimilating them into its institutions
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- Oct 2020
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By using HTML as the uniform interface, we can separate the interface from the engine.
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it also allows for more divergence in how people write there code and where they put their logic, making different svelte codebases potentially even more different due to fewer constraints. This last point is actually something I really value, I read a lot of Svelte code by a lot of different people and broadly speaking things look the same and are in the same places.
Tags
- strong conventions resulting in code from different code bases/developers looking very similar
- idiomatic pattern (in library/framework)
- idiomatic code style (programming languages)
- programming: multiple ways to do the same thing
- consistency
- uniformity
- convention
- software development: code organization: where does this code belong?
Annotators
URL
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- Aug 2020
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www.nytimes.com www.nytimes.com
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Senior, J. (2020, July 21). Opinion | I Spoke With Anthony Fauci. He Says His Inbox Isn’t Pretty. The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/21/opinion/anthony-fauci-coronavirus.html
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stackoverflow.blog stackoverflow.blog
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“I came to Rust from Haskell, and I feel that Haskell is a very elegant and safe language. The biggest differentiator for me is that there is a greater difference between high-performance code and idiomatic ‘clean’ code in Haskell than in Rust. Most Rust code looks like most other Rust code, even when it performs well. Haskell can become unfamiliar real quick if someone is operating under different libraries and goals from what you are typically doing. Small differences in syntax can result in huge differences in behavior, and Rust has more uniformity on that axis.”
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- Nov 2017
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wrapping.marthaburtis.net wrapping.marthaburtis.net
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I sought to shut down a startup culture at the school that was resulting in sites built with decidedly unregulated palettes and proportions.
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- Nov 2013
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caseyboyle.net caseyboyle.net
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That is to say, a uniformly valid and binding designation is invented for things, and this legislation of language likewise establishes the first laws of truth. For the contrast between truth and lie arises here for the first time.
"... as it were, to engage in a groping game on the backs of things."
Creating the very basis from which a lie, or the act of lying, can become manifest, vis-a-vis, truth telling. The $25,000 question: "What is Rhetoric?"
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