I brought it into an aging ~12-year-old system to add a bit of SPA-like functionality to some pages. It works wonderfully with those classic MVC-style web sites.
I can highly recommend it for giving older, jQuery-era sites a new lease of life. I dropped in the CDN built into the view files, tweaked some of the controllers to return content outside of their usual template layouts based on a hx-request header, and I was away.
Didn't have to mess with bundlers and compilers. It was refreshing!
I've finally found someone else who's seen this behaviour!
I've noticed this too, and I found (in my case anyway) that Bing/Outlook seems to Rot13 the keys of the query parameters - is this what you're seeing too?
Bezie has some overlap, but the use case is a bit different. There are a couple of VSTs like LFO Tool and MIDIShaper that allow you to create a fixed width shape and toggle how many bars it should stretch over. In Bezie, if you select 8 bars, you'll literally get 8 bars to automate. As an example, if you wanted to map a couple different parameters to play with a song transition or drop, it'd make sense in Bezie, not so much in the others.
If anyone can spare 5-10 minutes a week to help me and a couple of others maintain this list (testing and merging pull requests, closing issues, etc.), I'd be very appreciative!
You can contact me here or send an email to cookies[at]prebake[dot]eu
If an extension like Prebake (which I realize just a filter list) added a 'DNT: 0' HTTP header (Do Track instead of Do Not Track), then automatically dismissing cookie notices would be a "legitimate" new solution and not be "cheating" (as some might call it). If the user also runs a ad or tracker blocker, well, that's their business and a different problem. ;)
"2) Why does the background & image move around with the mouse? It doesn't have anything to do with the app."
That's what got me. To me it implies that when someone is within proximity of the phone, it will vibrate/notify the user; other than that, I have no idea.
The difference is these countries pride themselves on the freedoms their citizens possess, yet they go behind their backs and surveil everything and anything they can about them, usually using technologies and platforms their own citizens helped devise.