Well, you can switch to non-GTK applications but beyond that you can't really get more information density into apps that follow the Adwaita design language. You can't even really theme them.
Jesus_666
Small gadget? An angled high-CRI pocket flashlight with a magnetic base. I like the Manker E02 series but it's just one option of several.
It's small enough to fit in the tiny pocket on my jeans, gives good light, can be used right from the pocket if I need my hands free, and runs on AAAs (or a 10440 lithium battery for brighter light but worse endurance).
The magnetic base is super useful because I can often just plop the flashlight down while working on something. When I'm upgrading my desktop PC I can just stick the light to some part of the chassis and get light right where I need it.
That's pretty damn good for something that cost me thirty bucks with the 10440 included. And the battery even has a built-in USB-C charging port.
An die Beine kommt bei mir nur Coca Cola. Oder Fritz, wenn welche da ist.
Well, yeah, if the car makers can add exceptions to the law and turn it upside down then the law becomes useless.
I explicitly wouldn't allow that exception. If larger cars are less efficient then disincentivizing their use by means of higher taxes is clearly beneficial to society. If you want to drive that three-ton gas guzzler then you can surely afford that 30% higher vehicle tax. If you can't, might I interest you in this comparatively efficient and tax-reduced Subaru Sambar?
Mind you, I would apply different rules to things like semi trucks that (at least in my part of the world) you can't drive without a special license. But if you can drive it with a regular European class B license then the tax should scale progressively with size and mass because making larger and less efficient cars unattractive is specifically the point.
Get the city to install chicanes with trees planted in them. You can't just roll over those and a landship like that is going to have to slow down a lot to maneuver through them.
But yeah, I'd love tax brackets depending on car size. Huge trucks pay more, kei cars pay less. That would make a lot of sense for city liveability and road maintenance.
Maybe it's edible glitter. Which raises even more questions like how that came out of someone's kidneys.
Oh, don't get me wrong, I fully agree. Undefined behavior is terrible UX and a huge security risk.
Undefined behavior was kind of okay when RAM and storage were measured in kilobytes and adding checks for this stuff was noticeably expensive. That time has passed, though, and modern developers have no business thinking like that, even ones working on low-level languages.
I should've phrased my comment differently.
Yeah, that's basically the kind of logic you use when designing a low-level programming language: If we didn't define what happens here then anything that happens is correct behavior and it's up to the user to avoid it.
Of course applying that logic to a GUI application intended for a comparatively nontechnical audience is utter madness.
That one's easy. Is the crash part of the program's design?
If not: It's an implementation bug, the program is not behaving as intended.
If yes: It's a design bug, crashes shouldn't be intended behavior.
The movie has gained a redeeming quality over the years. That quality is that it's not the live-action series.
Power Word: Heel (turns the target evil)
Firebald (flames burn off the hair of all targets within the AOE but do no further damage)
Healing Wood (repairs damage to doors and furniture)
Eldritch Dolt (a magical idiot shows up and tries to tackle the target)
Misty Stop (allows you to teleport yourself to where you currently are)
Rage Armor (increases your AC but makes you too angry to cast spells)
Banding (see MtG rules, section 702.22)
Wash (look, the barbarian needs it and he's not gonna do it himself)
Doesn't that require extensions, which are only semi-supported?