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Tag selected: transparent.
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Saved by uncleflo on January 20th, 2022.
“Terms of Service; Didn't Read” (short: ToS;DR) is a young project started in June 2012 to help fix the “biggest lie on the web”: almost no one really reads the terms of service we agree to all the time. Background. The rough idea behind ToS;DR emerged during the 2011 Chaos Communication Camp near Berlin, with people from Unhosted a movement to create web apps that give users control over their valuable user data and privacy. In the summer of 2012, Hugo Roy (@hugoroyd) started the legal analysis and brought the project to life. Since then, more people have joined the team and have contributed through the reviewer community. Ultimately, all the work is transparent and the discussions happen in public. Our work is funded by non-profits organisations and individual donations and gets released as free software and open data. Please bear in mind that the project is still in the early phase and that most data is subject to important changes. More information about our classification. What does “ToS;DR” mean? the name is inspired by internet acronym TL;DR which stands for "Too Long; Didn't Read" and is often used on blogs and emails when a block of text is just really long and that people are too lazy to read the whole stuff. It was intended more as a code name than as a real name. But it seems that people like it (do you?)
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Saved by uncleflo on December 20th, 2019.
Using SLA/DLP 3D Printing technologies and these steps will get you 3D Printing transparent windows and other see-through objects. I’ve explored 3D Printing transparent windows and transparent 3D prints before (this tutorial) and wanted to revisit it with SLA. In my case, this was all produced with a Formlabs Form 2 SLA 3D Printer. 3D […] This is an advertise for our partner NordVPN. The travelling season is starting and it’s crucial you’re protecting your internet connection while abroad! Let’s imaging you’re walking down the beautiful old town part of your destination. It’s hot, you’re getting hungry and you need a drink. You’ve already checked out an restaurant at tripadviser and […] If you want to run fans or components using 12V on 24V 3D Printer you might find yourself in a pickle! A lot of 3D printers run 24V systems to help the stepper motors perform tougher tasks and run more silent. This in turn causes issues when you wan’t to start modding your 3D Printer […]
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Saved by uncleflo on January 3rd, 2019.
Complete list of future London property auction dates for 2018, access to London auction catalogues and tips for selling your property at auction in London. There are 18 London property auctioneers that regularly hold auctions at London locations, each typically hosting an auction 6 to 10 times a year. The number of properties listed for each auctioneer ranges from 50 to 200 per auction. When selling a London property at auction it can be useful to look through past auction sales (all of the London auctioneers publish their results online), this will help to determine which auctioneer is best suited to selling your property. Last updated by Mark Grantham on 5th January 2018 The table below is updated on a weekly basis to show forthcoming property auctions for the main London property auctioneers, for the year 2018. Clicking on the auctioneers name (first column) will take you to a page with contact details for the auction company.
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Saved by uncleflo on January 20th, 2015.
When we started building DropSend, we decided to support all languages worldwide from the start. The interface is currently in English only, but the application can send, store, sort and process your data whatever language you want. As a result, we have a good number of customers out east. To support worldwide languages, you need to use UTF-8 encoding for your web pages, emails and application, rather than ISO 8859-1 or another common western encoding, since these don't support characters used in languages such as Japanese and Chinese.
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Saved by uncleflo on May 5th, 2011.
This article documents the sample application WeatherStation, shown in Figure 1. The WeatherStation application window is partially transparent and it does not use system chrome, so it displays rounded and irregular borders instead of the usual rectangular frame. It also displays images that extend beyond the visual border of the application. The application queries weather forecast data from the Yahoo! Weather service based on a U.S. ZIP code. Data is returned from the service as XML and the application then parses, formats, and displays the data.
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