Engineer on @googlechrome. Involved in CSS and W3C standards. Previously @mozilla, @w3ctag. Mastodon: @dbaron@w3c.social

Rockville, Maryland, USA
Joined March 2008
Filter
Exclude
Time range
-
Near
@sgalineau The main one affecting me is new (longer) definitions of normal and rush service. Also various others.
Thinking about cancelling @w3c TPAC trip given changing China visa rules (still easier than how US/Can/EU treat non-white visitors)
3
@thierrykoblentz But the inline-blocks are *inside* a line, which is laid out as lines (of text) are. Those lines are inside a block.
Replying to @philwalton
@philwalton Sometimes helpful if the right people don't already know about it or know that people think it's important. Neither true here.
1
Replying to @ppk
@ppk @StuRobson That particular bug sounds like bugzil.la/868047 (@wanderview found that link) which is fixed in FxOS 1.1.
1
Replying to @hober
@hober I've had shoes that will set off the metal detectors.
Having many employees working during a "shutdown" makes government appear less important than it is. nytimes.com/interactive/2013…
8
1
So what happens to (a) airports and domestic air travel and (b) immigration/customs during a US government shutdown?
1
Replying to @jaffathecake
@jaffathecake @SickingJ @johnallsopp No, this is Reflow only if scrollbars need updating, and normal cost (but we could improve if needed)
2
Replying to @jaffathecake
@jaffathecake @SickingJ @johnallsopp When there's a change to scrollbars, we fall back to reflow.
1
1
Why you should be careful about which San José airport you're flying to: gcmap.com/mapui?PATH=SJC-SJD…
Replying to @wycats
@wycats Probably pretty browser-specific. Maybe I could try answering Qs into github.com/dbaron/browser-re… (good motivation to write)?
Replying to @johnallsopp
@johnallsopp @grorg even if intermediate flattening is a lot cheaper?
Replying to @johnallsopp
@johnallsopp @grorg if you have a 3-D effect for slides in a deck, and a 3-D effect inside the slide, do you want intermediate flattening?
1
Replying to @johnallsopp
@johnallsopp @grorg It's still applied, the question is when things get flattened.
Replying to @johnallsopp
@johnallsopp @grorg Also a real use case: people using 3D in separate parts of a large page that happen to nest shouldn't be surprised.
1
Replying to @johnallsopp
@johnallsopp not making the entire page need to be represented in 3D and thus using tons of memory/cpu/gpu (i.e., a good default)
1