I feel this is partly caused by designers working with huge screens and forgetting that smaller screens exist.
I feel this is partly caused by designers working with huge screens and forgetting that smaller screens exist.
For stuff like that, I always use this bookmarklet which instantly zaps any sticky elements.
Would be cool if it said anything other than something like “I’m sorry I do not understand your request”.
There are also those headers that auto-hide when you scroll down, but pop back up at the slightest upward scroll, blocking the line at the top of the screen that you were trying to read.
I wouldn’t be surprised if those numbers are made up. Just dark patterns to make it seem like the product is hot.
Though I’ve found it kinda interesting when websites show little messages like “Someone from country just bought item!”.
Literally why do news websites play some random unrelated video when I’m trying to read an article…
I used a shopping website today, where mousing over the header pops up a fullscreen navigation menu, and the only way to close it is to mouse over an empty part of the header. Made me do a lot of cursor gymnastics when trying to switch tabs while avoiding the damn menu.
Agreed. So many websites want you to sign up for their newsletter before you’ve even read the first line of text.
For me it’s Google search’s tab order. They always switch up the tabs for web, images, videos, etc. depending on what you search for. It makes the experience very unpredictable and annoying.
Recently they’ve also started putting related searches next to the tabs 🤦
“Are you always this quiet?”
“It usually takes me some time to be comfortable around new people.”
I’ve found that people are usually quite understanding and make an effort to include you in conversations if you just be honest with them instead of being snarky.
There is a GitHub issue about it. Looks like the endpoint could be added if someone is willing to work on it.
Not surprisingly, it does all the data tracking that it can for a “text-based conversation app”.
Prefixing it with an exclamation mark automatically converts it into a link.
Guess you’re visiting the Titanic shipwreck in a submarine…
I’ve noticed that viewing the same community through different instances even when not logged in can show different posts, comments, and votes. I’m not sure why either.
For example, compare these:
https://lemmy.fmhy.ml/c/mildlyinfuriating@lemmy.world
This is discussed in the GitHub: https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/issues/1331
It seems that admins can currently purge such images through a manual action.
I like USB-C especially when it clicks.