Readthis book, pick up this series if you haven't. I loved it, so I'm biased, but it's time you are too, so get working on it. Put it in your kindles, physical book TBRs and anything else, but just give it a shot, because I cannot recommend it enough. Read this post for my full review.
This is a near perfect finale for the mammoth attempt the author opened the series with. Echo of Worlds is, if not the most, one of the most spectacular books I've read this year. It's quite unimaginable, the feat M. R. Carey has achieved with this fantastic duology. Read this post for my full review.
This would make a fine pick for book clubs, there's a lot that can be discussed. If you're looking for something twisty, exciting or extraordinary, this is not it. It's more of a weekend read that will not take up a lot of your mental bandwidth. Read this post for my full review.
Some stumbles in this one, but Clare Pooley has an eager reader in me. And I always smile when I think about Daphne and re-read the passage I highlighted above. The book may not have been everything I hoped, but it sets out to demonstrate the title spectacularly. Read this post for my full review.
Eddie is amazing, and this book tugged at my heart. Hard. Marianne's no-nonsense prose helped me focus on just him and all the goodness he displays. Do pre-order this book. Do read it. I smiled through most of it. Read this post for my full review.
a fun, cozy read that can help you pass the time. The vibes in parts of it are just as lovely as the cover suggests, but it does nothing new. And while not all books have to be groundbreaking or do everything original, they do have to work, and parts of it did not. Read this post for my full review.
It did put in my mind the idea of following the route Michael mapped out in the book. It was intimate, and I enjoyed watching them get more than they imagined out of it. It's a funny and lovable character-driven romance of unexpected love. Recommended. Read this post for my full review.
It's action-packed, got a crew that's kind, fun, and simply clicks. I sense it's a small starter for the full main course to be served up ahead, and combines familiarity with creativity for a comic and engrossing fantasy. Spending more time with the characters at the next available opportunity is a must for me. Look no further to scratch your urban fantasy itch. Read this post for my full review.
It is a hard contest, but I shall see if it is the book or the characters that stay at the forefront of my memory the longest. I'll tell you one thing for sure: it's scratched that itch I've had ever since I wrapped up my read of A MAN CALLED OVE. Read this post for my full review.
I could tell you every little thing that happens in the book, and you'd probably still have a great experience reading Blue Sisters. This is how polished the book is. It is simply sublime. Read this post for my full review.
Our new Science of Reading: Beyond Phonics series ends with our
\r\n'Foster Joy in Early Readers' webinar.
\r\nThis is perfect for new and returning users who teach grades K-8! Learn how to set your early readers up for success by using the Article-A-Day routine, along with our knowledge-building decodables. All registrants will receive a webinar recording, and attendees will get a
\r\ncertificate of completion.
Some sites have this option, some do not. Some with more text do not have this option than others with much less text. Stack Overflow for instance displays only the question rather than any answers in Reader View.
I have had my Firefox upgraded from 38.0.1 to 38.0.5 and have found a new feature called ReaderView - which is a sort of overlay which removes "page clutter" and makes text easier to read.Readerview is found in the right hand side of the address bar as a clickable icon on certain pages.
This is fine, but from the programming point of view I want to know how "reader view" works, which criteria of which pages it applies to. I have done some exploration of the Mozilla Firefox website with no clear answers (sod all programming answers of any sort I found), I have of course Googled / Binged this and this only came back with references to Firefox addons - this is not an addon but a staple part of the new Firefox version.
I made an assumption that readerview used HTML5 and would extract contents but this is not the case as it works on Wikipedia which does not appear to use or similar HTML5 tags, instead the readview extracts certain s and displays them alone. This feature works on some HTML5 pages - such as wikipedia - but then not others.
If anyone has any ideas how Firefox ReaderView actually operates and how this operation can be used by website developers, can you share? Or if you can find where this information can be located, can you point me in the right direction - as I have not been able to find this.
Then each of these "nodes" is given a score based on things such as comma counts and class names that apply to the node. This is a somewhat multi-faceted process where scores are added for text chunks but also scores are seemingly reduced for invalid parts or syntax. Scores in sub-parts of "node" are reflected in the score of the node as a whole. ie the parent element contains the scores of all lower elements, I think.
The algorithm works with paragraph tags. First of all, it tries to identify parts of the page which are definitely not content - like forms and so on - and removes them. Then it goes through the paragraph nodes on the page and assigns a score based on content-richness: it gives them points for things like number of commas, length of content, etc. Notice that a paragraph with fewer than 25 characters is immediately discarded.
Scores then "bubble up" the DOM tree: each paragraph will add part of its score to all of its parent nodes - a direct parent gets the full score added to its total, a grandparent only half its score, a great-grandparent a third and so on. This allows the algorithm to identify higher-level elements which are likely to be the main content section.
In order for these Reader View algorithms to work for your website, you want them to correctly identify the content-heavy sections of your page. This means you want the more content-heavy nodes on your page to get high scores in the algorithm.
Hi all, I purchased my wife a new Apple MacBook M1 2020 because Apple said iPhone and iPad apps will run natively. My wife has desperately wanted a Mac but seemed excessive to have iPad and Mac in her eyelash office. I thought, perfect, Mac can be productive and she can do her payments !! Wrong.. Apparently app developers can opt out of having their apps available on the new Mac.. Please Square tell me your only temporarily blocking the app from being available because you want to make sure it works right first or something ??? Pleeeeasssse ...
Because Square is used as a merchant processing terminal, the PCI compliance rules we need to adhere to are very strict. PCs, Macbooks, laptops and other computers use vastly different operating systems that don't adhere to existing security protocols for things we need to process payments securely (eg PIN on Glass).
Sorry I couldn't be of more help here! It may be worth checking if you have a phone or tablet that can run Square POS and connect to our readers. Keep in mind you can still manually key card transactions on a computer via Virtual Terminal - you just won't be able to connect the reader or run the POS app.
Has this been resolved yet as i just purchased a new square reader today but I can't seem to find how to connect to my macbook pro. I don't want to have to go out and buy more hardware, that was the point in buying the square card reader in the first place. I have seen other businesses run using their macbook direct to square reader but I can't seem to find the information on how to connect it.
Sorry for any confusion here! Square's Point of Sale app and card readers are actually not or haven't ever been compatible with desktops, laptops, PCs or Macbooks. This isn't something that's likely to change in the future unfortunately, and at the moment we have no plans to integrate our Point of Sale or card readers with these devices or operating systems. Our readers are specifically built to be used with approved mobile devices with touch screens, which have a very different set of PCI compliance requirements than using a computer to process payments with a physical card would have. You can view mobile devices that Square has tested as compatible with Square Readers here.
We do create various business tools outside of our Readers and Point of Sale apps that can be used via your Square Dashboard on a web browser on a computer or Macbook - we have some tools that allow you to manually key payments through a web browser, or book appointments, send invoices or otherwise manage different sides of your Square account. It sounds like this may be the sort of thing you've seen in the past?
Sorry I can't be of more help here! If you're not going to be able to use the reader, please return it to the place of purchase for a full refund, or if you ordered hardware from our online shop you can find more about returning your order here.
Hi there, been using square on my phone and use the square reader as check out but am getting a new Asus Chromebook and wondering if u can pair the Square READER to an asus chromebook to take contactless payments opposed to using my phone. Thanks in advance
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