tfedder.de
photography hobbyist and web dev
always learning about the web
blogging on https://tfedder.de/blog/
279 posts
110 followers
287 following
Regular Contributor
Active Commenter
comment in response to
post
Yeah, same with barbecue sets.
If you know, you know.
comment in response to
post
Correct, but most view transitions (context of this conversation) can be considered progressive enhancements.
comment in response to
post
I understand that. Firefox is niche these days, still the best option for me personally so far. Also, considering it’s primary source of income, it isn’t far removed from surveillance capitalism itself. It seems it will die soon either way.
comment in response to
post
I think it is okay since WebKit supports it as well by now. But if a feature is only in Blink and I add that to a site, then I am complicit in making the best version of that site the version in Blink. And I don’t like being complicit in surveillance capitalism.
comment in response to
post
Thank you. 🙏
comment in response to
post
nice, subtle underline
comment in response to
post
😰
comment in response to
post
Like that?
comment in response to
post
GDPR is so good. Too bad the EU is attempting to water down their version.
www.heise.de/en/news/Civi...
comment in response to
post
Knowing which pixel sizes are meant to be px and which pixel sizes are meant to be proportional to the text size. (Maybe that’s an issue that is bigger than just variables)
comment in response to
post
The issue is what do we use instead?
Chrome? Hope you don't care about your privacy.
Edge/Opera/Vivaldi? Chrome with extra steps.
Safari? Only on Apple products.
Arc? Murdered because of AI.
Brave? Shitty CEO and crypto.
Zen? Firefox with extra steps.
🤷
comment in response to
post
A: STAR
B: Approval
C: FPTP
D: 3-2-1
comment in response to
post
🥳
comment in response to
post
This.
Would be neat if reduced motion and contrast preferences could be there as well, maybe where the page zoom is.
comment in response to
post
Exactly.
comment in response to
post
Poverty is good actually. It motivates people to kick down instead of punching up.
Why does our planet have to be inhabitable, while others aren’t?
Money is a limited natural resource.
You can eat money, if you have any that is.
Inheritance is inherently fair.
comment in response to
post
What a perfect place to start the recording from.
comment in response to
post
Yes, some people do. I don’t know why; I, too, prefer to view content on site, not just because of the atmosphere, but also because of my feed reader’s limitations.
comment in response to
post
Oh no. So I should give up right now, right?
comment in response to
post
That’s because I am really smart. Like when I put my hardware token on my physical keyring, and stored the TOTP secrets including usernames, which often include email, which has the same domain as my website, which for legal reasons shows my address—on the keyring. Like, that level of smart.
comment in response to
post
Well I did imagine that, except the lightning. That's why copies of my password manager file are also on two cloud storage accounts that are secured by passwords only. Two of the dozen of passwords I do store in my head.
comment in response to
post
Is that why it isn't in the archive yet?
comment in response to
post
That is really clever. Let’s hope I’ll remember that when I need it.
comment in response to
post
#CSSDay FOMO support group FOMO
achievement unlocked:
same day double FOMO
comment in response to
post
Or is separation of concerns so far removed from reality, that every user-agent that aims to provide an accessibility tree will be forced to deal with HTML and CSS anyway?
comment in response to
post
Is there a point in making HTML as accessible as possible on its own, say without CSS, adding alternatives in HTML, which will get display: none; once CSS is applied, and HTML-hidden content that becomes only accessible if CSS is available, which will be displayed due to the CSS display property?
comment in response to
post
Deep down you know that all that personal data is *necessary* to be processed for their interests, which outweigh every single right, freedom and interest of yours.
But hey, I write IP addresses to access logs based on legitimate interest, so I shouldn’t criticise them I guess. lol
comment in response to
post
Someone make a bot that replies: Check for current browser support on caniuse.
comment in response to
post
Or, to be more precise, whether or not the font is applied; because I itend to use font-display: optional; for performance reasons.
comment in response to
post
That sounds interesting, but how would you query for whether or not the font did load?
comment in response to
post
I could see that working if I had a font file for each font-weight; but can I trick CSS to map its font-weight to a different WGHT of a variable font?
comment in response to
post
Great idea. But why quit performance work over this? Why not optimizing the performance of streaming useful content at the beginning of the HTML, and then "optimizing the performance" of streaming useless 2MB towards the end of the HTML?
comment in response to
post
I am not saying that you should care, but I’m always excited when you post about your 11ty‐based design system documentation site.
comment in response to
post
What are people using, that are forced to get their design tokens in to or out of Figma?
comment in response to
post
I surf the web for fun; blocking JS per default helps immensely with this.
It results in lots of "sites" — empty viewports — where I bail immediately, and lots of sites that are no longer annoying.