@EricR57959850 Thanks for the report. I see what I can do.
@cos_theta @miketaylr It’s https://t.co/fZNIuq0rz7 (from the blog post), but it’s not visible to mere mortals like me. Given the blog post is out now, the security embargo might be lifted, but maybe there’s more, which they didn’t cover. Also not
@jlongster The Memento protocol (https://t.co/bsGYkLC4FP, https://t.co/voBIuyTPbI) is very interesting in this context; it’s implemented by the @internetarchive.
@jlongster The thing is: these links are not provided by the author, but by users. The author is not in control. With the current Web architecture, if you need absolute link stability, you probably need to archive the page on the @internetarchive or so an
@jlongster @addyosmani @rauchg See my response here: https://t.co/ZDPKvbnuyN.
RT @addyosmani: @rauchg It’s so nice! Some cool related experiments around “link to mediaâ€
@giuseppegurgone It’s actually a little less likely to break for media than for text, since the selector is based on attributes on (children of) `video`, `img`, and `audio`. Unless, of course, the media per se is removed or changed. Time will tell…
@stanzillaz The link is hidden at the end of the video: https://t.co/AHTh2TxnMO. It’s still early days, so you need to side-load the extension. Once the code matures, it will be properly released on the Chrome Web Store.
@feross @noor_siddiqui_ Congratulations, this got to be the most documented proposals (plural!) ever. <3