Sudo Byte |
I'm a college student in Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, I post random amusing things I find on the internet here. If you like more reading content and less random relinks, head over to my blog. |
(via iheart-photos)
There are these little myths we often let ourselves base important decisions and major purchases around. I like to call them the “What if” myths. Because of my business I seem to hear them all the time. That said, the tech savvy are not immune either. I myself have fallen prey more times than I…
Google Chrome’s Performance Report for a page load. It’s more detailed than the typical network trace: it includes layout, painting, eval and GC times. It’d be cool to see this for every browser.
The extension is speed tracer for dev version of chrome. It hooks into internal chrome APIs for the data.
I’ll have to agree with Google on this one. The ability for a server to collect information about you has always been around since the internet existed. Services on the web use data gathered from its users to determines where to improve itself.
There’s no free lunch.
For the few already paranoid, you don’t sign up for the service before reviewing the privacy policy. That should be SOP. Most people just want to see the content of the page they’re visiting, they’ll ignore all dialogs to get there. My dad clicks ok and install to any dialog he comes across while surfing (he’s learning to click ‘x’ more often now).
Educating the majority of the public is large undertaking that is most ineffective. People choose the option recommended by their expert peers in the field (or ‘ok’ it). Most people don’t want to be bothered with the legal stuff - it breaks the train of thought. When was the last time you cared to read the terms of service? Most will just check it and move on. Usually people get suspicious if you request more personal info than email & name.
Finally, if the law is put up, how would that be enforced? Only the large US-based companies would be penalized; other companies outside the US and nefarious companies would simply ignore this. Google Analytics would effectively be migrated to another company somewhere else. This is similar to why gun control is ineffective: the law-abiding civilians are disarmed but the criminals still wield guns.
Please finish your game. A rant by Chris Hecker. (Skip to 3:25 for the start of the talk.)
To be honest, I prefer it that way. I’m against using icons to replace the protocols. 90% of the time, the http:// is there, the text is just visual noise. And when did looking at the http:// provide you any useful information? Even as a geek, the http:// isn’t particularly informative in a browser address bar.
I’ll leave a quote from a chrome developer:
Easily 95%+ of our users wouldn't even _notice_ the difference between a URL with a scheme and one without, let alone have any idea what the difference meant.
(via willhui)
Are you serious?
Terrible interface design, I can’t tell if HD is enabled or disabled.