Links
AddRT @mikko: How famous people rate Google Play Store apps:
Come @GOGcom recupera i vecchi giochi e come li rende operativi sui moderni sistemi operativi
RT @e_kaspersky: It's so easy to lose a precious #Twitter handle because of stupid procedures. Valuable advice here:
The traffic-camera ticket: like a parking ticket, it looks lawful enough. When they receive one, most people simply write the check. It seems like the sensible and law-abiding thing to do. But this is not a parking ticket. In legal terms, it is not a proceeding in rem—against your car.
How IBM’s new five-qubit universal quantum computer works @May 05, 2016 at 08:57AM via Pocket
Here's something interesting I came across while reading Introducing HTML5 by Bruce Lawson and Remy Sharp, which I recently purchased. In one of the early chapters, Bruce mentions that when tags are not nested properly, the resulting generated DOM will be seen differently in different browsers. Of course, when you "view source", the code will be the same in all browsers. It's when you inspect the page (or view the "generated source") using developer tools that the results can differ. After some testing, this is indeed the case. Here's the code that I tested:
RT @matteo_curti: Quanta gente c'è nello spazio ora?
Alcuni suggerimenti per non rivelare la tua RAL in fase di contrattazione di un nuovo lavoro.
Yesterday, two people expected that they'd be able to see each other when they met up, against all odds, in No Man's Sky's massive, virtual galaxy of 18 quintillion planets.
We then extracted the useful parts from the raw data. With the data processed, we were able to create a scatterplot of all the emergency braking incidents. Each dot here represents an incident. Once again, we were unable to spot any clear pattern of incidents.
Android: If you've updated to the latest Google Maps for Android and miss the ability to save maps for offline viewing, don't worry, there's still a way to do it. It's a little easter egg-y, but it works. Here's how.