I sent some money to a colleague's PayPal account who was collecting money for another colleague's leaving collection. I used the name of the colleague who was leaving as the note/reference on the payment.
A few days later I received an email from PayPal asking me to provide the date of birth of the colleague who was leaving and that the money would be held until the request was resolved. They claimed it was to meet regulatory obligations.
I called them and said I refuse to provide the info because I felt it breached GDPR laws and besides, it had nothing to do with them.
I came across this attribute when making a model/popover widget to capture focus, which is necessary for accessibility and keyboard navigation. Works great and will be using again.
I've seen this sort of comment many times, implying that indicators, flashing lights, use of the horn is unique to certain countries or regions. Yet every time, there's replies saying "hey I'm from <region not mentioned> and we also do this".
It seems to me people haven't realised the behaviour displayed in their part of the world isn't as unique or quaint as they think it is!
There's Headwind CSS, which orders classes predictably. But it doesn't move them to separate lines. This could be a config option if you're willing to write a pull request.
I used to make music with Fruityloops between the age of about 14-20. I never got that great but pleased with a few tracks. Still have hundreds of "demos" on my old hard drive.