As a potential tech fix to the endless debates about flagging maybe there should be an upvote/downvote system for flagging rather than just a flag option?
> Mr. Carr, 45, was the author of a chapter on the F.C.C. in the conservative Project 2025 planning document,[0] in which he argued that the agency should also regulate the largest tech companies, such as Apple, Meta, Google and Microsoft.
I think the problem with documentation is that most workers feel it's the lowest grunt task, training your replacements and not 'doing'. When in reality, you're helping onboard the next wave of people. And the best part is they don't necessarily need your time, just your docs.
I've on many occasions have been a part of detailing documents and creating them for the purpose of how-tos, I always felt a sense of accomplishment when being able to help new people into the team especially if it was something I struggled with.
A trusted colleague and I were talking recently about documentation and I was saying this much, they said it's the work that the lowest person at the company would do and I should stop viewing it as such a high level. I still enjoy documenting process but now I don't want to do it due to the fact that it is seen this way.
This isnt really true anymore. Firefox has caught up in devtools, and has superior tools when it comes to animation debugging. Performance also isn't worse than chrome, in fact I've found that FF uses a lot less memory than chrome does.
The only time I open chrome is to use an occasional WebApp that needs the Bluetooth API or something like that.
On my 2017 Ultrabook with only 4gb of ram, Firefox stalls repeatedly & has long stretches of being entirely unresponsive after half a dozen tabs, and gets worse from there.
I have some delay where a navigation might be delayed some, but Chrome doesn't ever lose input and generally manages to keep going.
Even on a desktop with 64GB ram, Firefox gets slow over time & needs to be restarted when I have a significant number of tabs open. Tab auto-suspend extensions generally "fix" the problem, but it's been frustrating that whatever the on-page performance is in Firefox, the app itself feels so prone to bouts of unresponsiveness.
Please be more precise about what you mean by "significant number of tabs", is it 50, 200, 500, more ?
Because on a 16 Gb laptop, I don't have any problem with 50 tabs open with Firefox.