The author of the site works for Brave. The results need to be taken with a grain of salt. Is is more private than Chrome? Absolutely. Is it the best browser for privacy? Ehhh…
The author of the site works for Brave. The results need to be taken with a grain of salt. Is is more private than Chrome? Absolutely. Is it the best browser for privacy? Ehhh…
My favorite example is this one, because it’s a faithful translation of the meaning of the song while substituting words to keep the rhymes.
That is literally called The Gallop!
The alternative would be a non-standard diaper app that, rather than hiding the incoming call, would pick it up and drop it. I don’t know if such software exists.
I assume you meant dialer app 😆 . But anyway, for some Android phones you can use call screening.
He refers to the fact that the web app does not have default access to your device sensors, microphone, storage, etc.
Good article for discussion.
Health checks is one situation where kubernetes really shines. It makes a clear distinction between readiness probes (when the pod is ready to start serving traffic), liveness probes (when the pod should be considered dead), and startup probes (when the pod has finished bootstrapping). Coupled with autoscaling it then becomes acceptable to have a pod stop serving new traffic when it’s too busy, because other pods can be created in a short time to take the extra load.
Including backend checks in your application depends on its nature. I think the mistake that the article’s author made was not to include the checks, but to have too big of a blast radius when the check fails.
Time to piss off both camps an start calling it f5x.