I figured it out.
I was already headed the right direction by using something like this…
<button text=“Hold Enter” ontap=“enterhold” ondoubletap=“enterrelease” />
But for whatever reason it seems to ignore a double tap to release it, maybe I’m just too slow on tapping lol. I changed it to onhold=“enterrelease” and it works like intended.
Came back just to see if you had posted a video link somewhere else.
I appreciate your response here. That is an entirely fair point. Especially considering how the people in the internet will very quickly jump on a hate train and harass someone.
Maybe post the video link?
Coulda just flew to Oregon for that one lol. You can catch them up on haystack rock.
I bet it was still an awesome experience you had none the less.
Panay monitor lizard.
My buddy was trapping monitor lizards for us to eat and we caught one of those. He recognized it and told me that they were endangered.
We did NOT eat it. It went back into the forest, unharmed.
Strange, I guess to be fair I haven’t used their launcher in at least a year or two. Good that you found a solution that works better for you though.
I have a large GOG library, I no longer use their launcher because I’m on Linux and use heroic. However their launcher always worked fine for me.
I don’t recall ever having an issue. Are you sure there wasn’t something underlying going on with your system?
Because your 0$ per month after dropping them doesn’t hurt their bottom line.
Corporations generally weigh the risks and the benefit often wins out and they make more money because there are enough people that either reluctantly cave into the fee increase, forgot about their subscription or just don’t care that it’s going up.
It’s fairly seldom (but seems to be increasing over the years) to see so much backlash that a company walks back on what they were planning to do.
Whoosh
You are right, it’s really not cut and dry in today’s age.
Could be something like the way I have my son’s tablet setup. If he tries to install something, I get a notification to approve it on my phone.
I can disable or enable the device at any point and have active times setup on it so it automatically does that if I’m not manually managing it.
BUT, that requires the parent to be actively engaging in what their kids are doing while trying to not be helicopters over them. You can setup home networks to block stuff like that also, but that requires some technical knowledge that a lot of people may not want to deal with. Also, that has no bearing on what is done outside of the home.
Also the age of the kid is a huge factor, a 13 year old is going to have a higher ability to get around those restrictions.
So now we’re at the point of basically saying, there’s not a really good defined way of doing that. However, if we ask for a copy of your ID, that’s adds a decent protective layer. BUUUT, that’s going to throw up red flags to everyone who wants to protect themselves and doesn’t want their info out there like that. Which we all know there are data breaches and bad actors out there (like Tesla employees sharing videos from people’s cars) so it’s reasonable to not want to provide stuff like that.
Now at this point we’re kinda back to square one what can be done to manage this, be secure, and appease both sides of the table?
My old apartment complex tried to do something similar. We had the carpets deep cleaned the day before the end of our lease.
They straight up told me they were charging me because their maintenance came in after we moved to do some work and it was their policy to have it cleaned again from the mess that THEIR maintenance people left and charge us.
I told them that they had just admitted to fraud, as they were trying to charge us for a problem that they caused after our lease had already expired.
I got my deposit back.
The Boy and The Heron
And OPs “Pstpstpst” requires too much enunciation. Pspsps is where it’s at.