Thomas Steiner (@tomayac)

Now at @tomayac@toot.cafe

The below is an off-site archive of all tweets posted by @tomayac ever

May 19th, 2020

@chelo_xl @ChromiumDev Have you tried catching errors? https://t.co/DJkjRtxvdr Maybe the browser lets you know more details.

via Twitter for iPhone

@chelo_xl @ChromiumDev Maybe try filing a new.crbug.com, or providing additional data for a potentially existing bug.

via Twitter for iPhone in reply to chelo_xl

@schweinepriestr “DoT only uses port 853, while DoH uses port 443.

Because DoT has a dedicated port, anyone with network visibility can see DoT traffic coming and going, even though the requests and responses themselves are encrypted.”—https://t.co

via Twitter for iPhone

@aemkei Congratulations! Well deserved! 🎊

via Echofon in reply to aemkei

The @MSEdgeDev team’s Project Fugu 🐡 talk from the #MSBuild conference: https://t.co/JngDqaPvvQ. Super excited about their work!

via Echofon

Chromium Blog: A safer and more private browsing experience with Secure DNS https://t.co/zRDjH9KoWj. DNS-over-HTTPS is a massive step forward toward a better, more secure web. 🔒

via Echofon

RT @windowsblog: Everything new from Microsoft Edge at Build 2020 https://t.co/0R584zRsBJ

via Echofon

RT @____lighthouse: 🔣Lighthouse 6.0 is out! Introducing new metrics to track Core Web Vitals, an updated performance score, multiple new au…

via Echofon

tkadlec Nice little feature in Chrome Dev Tools. Hover over the LCP badge under Timings in the Performance Panel and it shows you what triggered the LCP metric. pic.twitter.com/lGDiHudpBG

via Twitter Web App (retweeted on 9:07 PM, May 19th, 2020 via Echofon)

RT @ChromiumDev: 🧁 Recipe site @BettyCrocker has implemented the Wake Lock API seeing a 300% increase 🔈 in purchase intent indicators on ht…

via Twitter Web App

@derSchepp @ChromiumDev Huh, I thought it was supported since 76 (https://t.co/BNrbB4udgC). @argyleink, do you have more background?

via Twitter Web App

@gingerbeardman @danbri @benedictevans PWAs can’t badge the app icon on iOS yet, but they can on macOS. FWIW, @danbri, I’ve just filed https://t.co/tQjvpzNYgx regarding the inability to turn off badges via System Preferences.

via Twitter Web App

@mischmerz I don’t have an answer, sorry.

via Echofon in reply to mischmerz

RT @ChromiumDev: Preparing for AppCache removal:

Chrome 85 removes support for AppCache by default. Most developers should migrate off App…

via Echofon

@danbri @benedictevans Once PWAs are better integrated in the operating systems it should be possible to forcibly turn badges off on a per-app basis using the particular OS’s settings option. Meanwhile, yeah, I can see how this could be annoying. App de

via Twitter for iPhone in reply to danbri

@benedictevans This feels like an interesting place to let people know about the Badging API: web.dev/badging-api/. 🔴 Yes, your Progressive Web Apps can do this.

via Echofon in reply to benedictevans

@thalhamm Thanks, I’ve just filed feedback. If you notice something like this in the future, please let us know. 🦉 Ironic error indeed… https://t.co/4tj7YhZJkQ

via Echofon