"AI can help by providing mostly mostly accurate descriptions of images on web pages. This can be especially helpful when the image has not been provided with an text alternative, but is visible on the page."
Ich mag eine #Website machen, möglichst reines #HTML 4, möglichst ohne #Javascript. CSS 3 wenns sein muss, sonst eher 2.
Die Website soll möglichst auf Chrome genauso laufen wie auf Netscape (die Älteren werden sich erinnern...) und auch in Text-Browsern wie Lynx oder w3m.
tl;dr: Die Seite soll auch noch funktionieren, wenn javascript und css ausfallen.
Wie würde ich da denn "Tabs" machen? Oder was wären Alternativen zu tabs?
Oh man, there are so many #HTML tags I didn't know about. One of those is the <abbr> tag that can be useful when working with abbreviations. Here's a short example.
In 2024, for a locally hosted app that should feel fast, are there good reasons to prefer a pagination UX for an html table vs. showing all ~5k rows and just scrolling through them?
FWIW, I dislike the pagination UX, and resent seeing images load lazily on a 10Gbps network.
The underlying query is essentially instant; the bottleneck appears to be the browser, and I can ~solve that by batching DOM updates.
Isn't RSA the current secure solution for the corresponding encryption/security on the browser with JavaScript?
»Galois/Counter Mode and random nonces:
It turns out you can encrypt more than 2^32 messages with AES-GCM with a random nonce under certain conditions. It’s still not a good idea, but you can just about do it.«