It might have to be setup by an Airbnb host but the past few places I've stayed at had the ability to press a button inside the Airbnb app to automatically connect to their WiFi. Definitely saves some of the less tech-savvy hosts from having to figure out how to create a WiFi QR Code and print it out
The listing claims to be selling a brand new part still in its original packaging, so that wouldn't fit, although it certainly wouldn't be the first time that an eBay seller lied.
@foone is very quickly becoming my favourite account to follow on Twitter. He posts at least one super insightful Twitter thread every day or two about some fascinating quirk about computing history. Beats hitting Wikipedia:Special:Random for sure.
This is why I can't take any of this reasoning from SQLite seriously at all. The feeling I gather from this webpage is 'Hey, I made something I think is better than a popular thing, therefore every project I author from now on must use my thing and here are X number of refutable reasons why'
I personally think this framework is pretty cool, however unlike an earlier version of it that featured here on HN[1], the Docs and Tutorials section of the site no longer appear to work with Javascript disabled.
I read the title of this article wrong, thinking it was 'Why I Moved to Angular 2 from Vue.js' before reading it a second time. It's given me a thought though: has anyone ever moved from Vue.js back to the controversial Angular 2?
The year after I finished at Griffith, they implemented a 'Unlimited free internet downloads during off-peak hours' policy. Just reading up on it though, it's not as good value as I first thought: the first 5GB are full-speed, then thereafter you're capped to 64kbps off-peak for the rest of the calendar month.