why is this a hot webdev take
it pains me to say this but YouTube is a very good example of what to actually do (excepting the prohibitively long gibberish base64 channel names). people know how to just edit a URL to make it start at a time, or set it to HQ in the old days with &fmt=18
stop using chrome, at least use firefox which only passively antagonizes you in easily controllable ways
chrome has successfully rooted itself as the de facto web browser and now the main application we use, as was clearly the intention from the outset, and now we're seeing exactly what google had in mind with what they intended to do with that power
reminder that google is probably still trying to kill the internal systems that adblockers use, replacing them with a gutted version for the sake of "performance" and "security"
i get it, from an outside perspective getting this mad about Chrome hiding URLs seems a little ridiculous, but they are the building blocks of basically the whole Internet supposedly for sake of making the web more friendly, when we have all the reason in the world to suspect they're taking average users further from the metal so they don't hear the grinding noises when Google and other ad companies start doing nefarious shit with it
pitching firefox to the mastodon furry community: look it's uh, it's like chrome but it has a fursona,, and uh,,,,,
@bclindner nice analogy! also i agree. i like URLs
I am so confused. How the heck is hiding URLs more user-friendly even superficially? Sharing URLs *is* user-friendly!
This is a cyberspace version of the thing where Apple tried to spin getting rid of the headphone jack as “user-friendly”.
Sometimes I cannot believe that anyone would lie as blatantly as tech companies do, which is unfortunate because while I’m still reeling from their last lie they’ve moved onto an even bigger one.
alternate take
@bclindner safari has already done this and frankly it’s not *terrible*? it’s like a “80% as good” solution (i would say that’s the amount of ublock rules that can be mapped isomorphically to the declarative format) and the way it’s set up does make me think that it actually has better performance
however i would also say that this is firmly in premature optimization territory
alternate take
@cpsdqs @bclindner as a webdev safari is evil and awful and while chrome supports like every API (including weird ones that shouldn't exist) Firefox supports all the *good* ones and Safari just randomly decides what to support, and sometimes claims to support things but doesn't actually
safari makes my life worse
web dev
@syntacticsugarglider @bclindner i keep hearing about people who say this but to me edgehtml is the odd one out? maybe im doing web dev wrong; i havent really encountered any situation where safari has severe limitations (except pointer events on the ipad) but edgehtml keeps breaking flexbox for me regularly
web dev
@cpsdqs @bclindner oh it's mostly "fancy" Web APIs, things that are only needed to make the Web a first-class application platform (esp. on mobile) which is something Apple really doesn't want to happen
stuff like webgl, web audio, worker stuff, wasm post-mvp features, etc.
edgehtml is annoying but it's dead so who cares
web dev
@syntacticsugarglider @bclindner ah, yeah. safari pwas do suck
(but, hot take: viewport-fit cover still looks better and more native than android’s notch handling and status bar coloring which is wonderfully inconsistent across browsers)
i should note my windows vm hasn’t hasn’t even mentioned the existence of chromium edge, so i assume a lot of people are still using edgehtml :/
web dev
@cpsdqs @bclindner yeah i think i agree wrt the viewport stuff but I've never actually used a device with a notch so it's not visceral to me, I still use my S9 and have no plan on moving
i thought chromium edge was mostly adopted now but idk, i basically just support firefox and chrome most of the time tbh
@bclindner The Official Browser of snouts.online*
* At the time of this post, not actually the official browser of snouts.online
@bclindner there’s also vivaldi for people who want the web engines chrome uses without the extra garbage. even has an ad blocker built right in
@bclindner How long will it take before #Firefox copies even this braindead "feature"?
why is this a hot webdev take
@bclindner then they bake ads into chrome itself and you can never escape them
why is this a hot webdev take
@Aleums dawg holy shit is this real lmao that sounds absolutely absurd
why is this a hot webdev take
@wgahnagl seems inevitable. google is an advertiser above all other things
why is this a hot webdev take
@Aleums oh my god I didn't parse the "then" at the beginning of your post I thought they were Already Doing This and you were reporting on it lmaoo
why is this a hot webdev take
@bclindner Plus it's a lot easier to remove trackers and shit because you can clearly see where they are in the URL
why is this a hot webdev take
@bclindner this is the only thing YouTube hasn't fucked up yet. 11 chars for the video, you just go to youtu.be/11charshere to play it, you can add to the query string if you know what to type, whether it's long or short URL
I'll eat my hat before Google AMP darkens my web browser's doorstep
why is this a hot webdev take
watch. google is going to start doing the AMP thing on desktop where google is serving the page and tracking -every last click- but it LOOKS like you're on the actual site you wanna go