Keep your original search visible
When you perform a search, your query now remains visible in the address bar instead of being replaced by the search engine's URL.
Safari has done this for ages.
Search your tabs, bookmarks and history using simple keywords
You can access different search modes in the address bar using simple, descriptive keywords like @bookmarks, @tabs, @history, and @actions, making it faster and easier to find exactly what you need.
Spotlight already searches bookmarks and history. I'll grant Firefox tabs, but if you have that many open that you need to search you perhaps have other problems.
Type a command, and Firefox takes care of it
You can now perform actions like "clear history," "open downloads," or "take a screenshot" just by typing into the address bar.
"Open downloads" is Ctrl+J. Much quicker than typing it out, and laughably redundant if you already remember what Ctrl+L does. "Take a screenshot" is Alt+PrtScn. I forget the Mac shortcut. It has a 3 in it as I recall. "Clear history" is Ctrl+Shift+Delete for those people who have to do it often. I don't judge.
Cleaner URLs with smarter security cues
We've simplified the address bar by trimming "https://" from secure sites, while clearly highlighting when a site isn't secure. This small change improves clarity without sacrificing awareness.
Safari has also done that for years. I thought Firefox did too, but it already updated to 138 and I frankly don't care enough to get an older version.
The best one was a dentist that kept emailing me appointment information for someone else's kids.
I had something similar and I emailed back to cancel the appointment. They soon updated their records.
He wins golf trophies on the courses he owns and thinks he's simply a good player.
The Donald is good at golf he even wins tournaments that he didn't even play in!
Huh? I can't hear you over the sound of trump's brand new $400 million dollar plane from the middle east dictators.
To be accurate, the plane is thirteen years old and the Qataris have been trying to sell it for the past five years.
Many species' successes depend on parenting.
True enough, but I would go a step further and say that "grandparenting" is the ticket. There are many social species where individuals take turns at watching over the group's children, but there are very few that take collectivism to the next step. Learning from parents is great, but learning from grandma while mum and dad are out finding food is better.
I reported every single one I found for being Spam (even many I never watched). Eventually, they stopped coming up in my feed.
Funny how that doesn't work with the AI slop and outright scams in their adverts and "sponsored videos". And isn't it funny how they don't use that fancy content matching algorithm to spot when scammers change identities but use the exact same video?
I swear, if I hear Jingle Bells one more time...
Gee, if it has better properties than steel, can we build space ships out of InventWood?
Why not? They've already tried it with satellites.
We know (to a certain precision) that it has a specific start point, yet it will continue moving infinitely if it doesn't strike anything.
Granted I don't keep up with cosmology very much but last time I checked the Universe was believed to be finite but unbounded, meaning that our hypothetical photon would eventually end up right back where it started. That of course assumes that space is empty, whereas in reality it would eventually hit some random piece of space dust.
Chinese people are not about to buy up all those unsold cyberdumpsters.
Especially not when thereâ(TM)s a better version for half the price.
That says to me that UBI will be very difficult to achieve because the majority of politicians, including those that claim to be left wing, are actually pretty far right and don't want simplicity and efficiency to interfere with their ability to complain about "big government".
They can be both left and right, you know.
There is more than one left, and more than one right.
"Take that, you hostile sons-of-bitches!" -- James Coburn, in the finale of _The_President's_Analyst_