Network size is relevant to the problem only as an upper bound on data sources.

It's the number of sources followed by an individual user that creates a purely local problem. Networks have worked to exacerbate it by suggesting they follow five more sources every time the user blinks at the site.

Even then, it's not number of sources so much as something like mean number of posts per day and variance across the means between those sources followed.

The vacation photo bomb problem could be solved by "auto-foldering" rather than leaping to a purely algorithmic feed. Seems a spurious justification.

Yup, looks good! ?

We'd need to not have a title or have the title built by copying in the blurb prefix for that to work right.

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Whatever theme this is has an overlap issue between the next and previous post titles, when the screen is narrow and the titles are long.

CSS Is Awesome

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@japchap Yeah, that's pretty lame.

I thought either Arachis or PnutButler had added iPad support. Hmm. :|

Baz has the crashing ChimPnut problem, too. You should let Ludolphus know.

rel=me says "the href of this LINK is related to this content in that it identifies the author". Similarly a link could be related by being a feed for the page content.

@japchap You're only seeing a slice of the time that family spends together.

At home, the parents are part of the kids' playthings, because everything else quickly becomes static and boring and too well-known at home to hold the kids' interest.

Out at the park, the kids finally have new experiences to take in, relieving you of being the entertainment for a short hour.

The kids don't need to go to the park to experience their parents; they go to the park to experience the park and all it has to offer. The parents are just a safety net while they explore.

Or you get the helicopter parents who micromanage their kids' play, so the kids never get any confidence in their own abilities, but, oh my, are those parents ever so over-involved!

Gin in his bottle, Jack in mine:
My bedtime story's just a bottle of wine.
Gin in his bottle, Jack in mine:
Can't get no sleep; can't get no time.

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