It seems like it should work if they used (prefers-color-scheme) media queries inside of their SVG favicon.
I wouldn't be surprised if it doesn't work. In fact, I'd probably be surprised if it worked across browsers...
2/3
I appreciate that @github is changing the site's favicon in response to the system's light/dark color scheme (probably drafts.csswg.org/mediaquerie…). It's improved the UI for me (dark theme).
Though it looks like they're using JS to change the <link rel=icon> links.
1/3
I mean, it's not a big deal for me to just buy more soap since the first container of soap went missing, but it's also not really how I thought Amazon's e-commerce model worked.
So I thought @amazon used to have UI to tell them that an order marked as delivered ("left at mailbox") wasn't actually delivered. Now I can't find any such UI and the help content basically says "contact USPS".
Is the assumption now that I just pay for the thing again?
Things aren't that uniform. bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1773… is a bug I filed in the current (for a few more weeks) Ubuntu LTS release that was a relatively recent regression, and that's in the *date* command. (Though it appears to be fixed in 19.10.)
A photo of an urban environment I like [22/N]:
Ginza 8-chōme, Chūō-ku, Tōkyō-to 104-0061, Japan (border of 17-ban/18-ban)
日本〒104-0061 東京都中央区銀座8丁目(17番/18番)
In general, I like central city neighborhoods that have built a decent number of skyscrapers but also preserved the nicer half of the older generation of buildings in the gaps between them. I think of Toronto and Sydney as the best examples of this.