I think everyone can agree the no-html club is insane. Why not just a reduced version, so you can actually do stuff like links?
Ledivin
"Keep me in power and, more importantly, the spotlight"
She's an attention whore. Nothing more, nothing less. It's why she married her pedophile husband: he gave her attention when she was underage.
Kind of a toasted cinnamon, I guess?
That. The content of the screenshot you posted. That is what's going on.
Are only people who submit posts allowed to have opinions? 😂
Good way to lose 95% of your users
If everyone on your team of 6 is 20% faster, you don't necessarily need the 6th person. Maybe you put that towards more work, but that's not very American, these days. Cut costs, cash out, fuck 'em
I'll be honest, I thought Plex Pass was always a requirement for this 😅
Very, very optimistic of you to assume this isn't just retaliation for something, or because Musk is planning some new rideshare company/arm of Tesla.
Honestly, AI coding assistants (as in the ones working like auto-complete in the code editor) are very close to useless unless maybe you work in one of those languages like Java that are extremely verbose and lack expressiveness.
Hard disagree. They're not writing anything on their own, no, but my stack saves at least 75% of my time, and I work full-stack across pieces in 5 different languages.
Cursor + Claude was the latest big shift for me, maybe two months ago? If you haven't tried them, it was a huge bump in utility
In the short-term (0-6mo, maybe less): probably nothing really changes. It's not super likely that anyone would be holding on to a massive flaw, waiting for EOL. Nothing stops Microsoft from patching after EOL for something major, they've done it before.
Medium-term (maybe up to a year or two): you're looking at real potential to get infected with --who-knows-what--. Hard to say how long it would take or how widespread it would be.
Longer term: massive, massive security hole. Microsoft has probably even patched a major thing or two by now (despite EOL), but there will always be more
Anyone using basic HTML elements from the first HTML spec would still be supported in 99+% of cases today. HTML has added lots, and removed very, very, very little.