chess.com's 72-page report[0] alluded to this video, and I'm glad this is what they had to say: "We have concluded that the methodology and the underlying tools used in those analyses do not meet our standard."
The entire site is weirdly mobile (or perhaps just mobile Safari) unfriendly.
The home page also has some issues with elements clipping/overlaying and not registering clicks.
I say weirdly unfriendly because the graphic design is very $CURRENT_YEAR, which is usually designed mobile-first (since that’s where most of the traffic is these days). But the author clearly spends more time on the desktop (the article _is_ about tmux) and didnt check how it performs on mobile.
If it is just a safari issue I’m sympathetic. Testing for safari is a nightmare if you don’t have Apple hardware available.
Yes I had the same, after about 2 minutes things became weird and cut off.
Seems like a transcoding error for certain devices only then, if nobody else noticed it.
Unrelated, but it was completely impossible for me to put the video on full screen. It seems like the site did something with the scroll that prevented me from scrolling horizontally to click the full screen button.
I've recently used Deno to implement a couple of bots for a small discord channel, namely webhook handlers for Discord Slash Commands and Twitch's EventSub. It's honestly been amazing. Next to no configuration and deployments are dead simple. Just set up some env vars and push to github to deploy.
Deno seems ideal for the now common use case of serverless JavaScript, erm, servers. It's hard to imagine the project superseding the prior art in other domains, however. Deno is a little too weird.
Why hate JSX? There are lots of benefits to it, like debuggability and variable scoping rules are exactly those of javascript. Templating languages, on the otherhand, are not debuggable and have awkward scoping rules. And, they always feel broken in one way or another.
JSX is not magical which is what I appreciate the most about it.
Don’t forget proper and full typescript support. Going back to vue (2) after doing tsx was like going back to jquery; loads more context switching and mistakes.
The ability to type `children` alone makes a world of difference.