![](/static/253f0d9b/assets/icons/icon-96x96.png)
![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/0d5e3a0e-e79d-4062-a7bc-ccc1e7baacf1.png)
Worth noting: “Visible includes mobile hotspot with unlimited data at speeds up to 5Mbps.”
See also https://lemmy.world/u/p1mrx
Worth noting: “Visible includes mobile hotspot with unlimited data at speeds up to 5Mbps.”
I found them via IP address, so I don’t know anything about the company beyond that.
2a09:: 2a11:: and 2409:: are the shortest.
deleted by creator
I listed the 5 possible digits. What’s missing?
triggies
IPv6 subnet masks are long, but super easy because of hexadecimal. A bunch of F
s, then [
then a bunch of ]?0
s.
https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/family-laughing-at-crying-child-opening-christmas-present
That includes some history, but not the prompt itself.
I would say, anything whose spacetime geodesic (orbital/freefall path) intersects the spheroid defined by the surface of the Earth. Though by this definition, a comet on a 100-year collision course is already “on Earth”, so I’m not sure if that’s reasonable.
Drop the SPEED OF, just LIGHT. It’s cleaner.
That patch was my only contribution to Firefox, and I didn’t research how to update the user-facing changelog. When 122 hits my phone I’ll ping the bugs, to notify the 20 nerds who actually care about the problem. Typing IPv4/IPv6 literals is a pretty niche feature on the modern web.
Currently https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=org.mozilla.firefox says “Version 121.1.0, Updated on Jan 19, 2024”
There were some pull requests to fix that, but guys at Mozilla said that those pull requests lead to performance regressions and rejected that.
The latest PR was accepted in November, so IPv6 literals work in v122 alpha.
It’s not about how people write them, it’s how parsers parse them. IPv4 has been around since 1982, and most parsers interpret leading zeros as octal.
Because 1.2.3.4 and 1.02.003.04 both map to the same number.
But 10.20.30.40 and 010.020.030.040 map to different numbers. It’s often best to reject IPv4 addresses with leading zeroes to avoid the decimal vs. octal ambiguity.
Keyboard shortcuts are not relevant, because I’m referring to the mouse-only zoom interface.
I’ve added support for Ctrl/Command/Shift in v1.7, but the menu text is unchanged because I don’t know which keys are pressed prior to the click event. This matches Chrome’s behavior.
‘New Tab’ is the default/only behavior currently.
I notice that Chrome supports Ctrl-click (background tab) and Shift-click (new window), and Firefox provides a modifiers array, so I think I could replicate this.
When I highlight the trailing lemmy.ml and select Open Link in New Tab, Firefox takes me to https://sh.itjust.works/c/firefox@lemmy.ml (the original link target) instead of https://lemmy.ml
Hooray! Previously Firefox MV3 extensions had to include a custom button in the UI to prompt the user for host permissions at runtime. It generally made more sense to stay on MV2 than switch from a 2-click to a 6-click install procedure.