yes, like your quote says, you have to invite other users. you have to explicitly add every user’s email in order to let them edit it, you can’t just create a link and send it to people.
yes, like your quote says, you have to invite other users. you have to explicitly add every user’s email in order to let them edit it, you can’t just create a link and send it to people.
looks like there’s no way to allow edits for everyone with the link, they can only view the document that way. guess it’s Google Docs for me for the foreseeable future :(
also, it doesn’t seem to support previewing .odt, while .docx works fine.
Firefox is dependent on Google financially, not codeually.
I’d probably announce to people in other places that I’m going to host an AMA in a place that aligns more with my goals and that they’re free to join and participate there.
I had no paywall on my end, probably a regional thing.
it’s already in Arch’s stable repos.
sadly, skewing stats like that gives Google more reason not to support Firefox in the long run.
yes, that’s why there’s “neo” in the latter’s name.
yes, then it got rejected, and now another iteration is about to be voted on on June 20, 2024 https://digitalcourage.social/@echo_pbreyer/112637908478562409
I don’t think their goal is to become the next Reuters. as far as I can tell, the articles on the website are posted by one (1) person, and they’re free to express themselves in whatever way the want.
besides, for me at least, the phrase carries a specific meaning. it’s a self-deprecating quip, an acknowledgment that what they did wasn’t some super serious journalistic work, given that it mostly comprised of sending Mozilla an email, and doesn’t warrant using something that would indicate more extensive journalistic work like “I did some digging” or “I investigated”.
it’s a manner of speech used jokingly. similar to how someone “does an oopsie” where, you might find, “an oopsie” isn’t a specific activity that someone performs.
and hey, figurative “literally” was good enough for Joyce and Dickens.
Youtube is apparently testing locking the content behind a login. multiple projects (including video downloaders, alternative front-ends, and so on) have been experiencing issues in the past few days.
I replied something along the lines of “it infringes my rights as a EU citizen granted to me by GDPR” and immediately got a reply that it got accepted.
that’s a name I haven’t heard for a while, not since their data breach.
huh, never heard of it
okay, but that’s not relevant to what I’m talking about here.
the first known written appearance of singular “they” is so old that it was still spelled with the thorn (þei)