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Looks cool. However, for me in Firefox the dragging of elements from the left bar to the canvas doesn't work. It works fine in Chrome.


Yep, another Chrome only application.


What works for me was dragging from the corner of the <div>, not from the svg itself. (Firefox 81.0, Ubuntu 20.04)

Looks neat! Great work.


it doesnt work for me on firefox/osx unfortunately



Same here (Firefox 81.0 on OSX.) No errors in the javascript console.


Same dragging issue here.

Firefox Developer Edition 82.0b4 (64-bit) on Pop_OS.


It seems to work by dragging the whitespace around the icons, not the inner portion.


This app looks great - it would be really helpful to use it in Firefox where a lot of devs, designers and techies are.


Not working for me either. Firefox 80.0 on Linux Mint 20. Dragging outside svg's doesn't do the trick either.


Unfortunately, we did not have enough time to take care of the firefox related issues. :( However I think this is doable with the right polyfill.


it works for me using right click and drag the object on the left to the canvas. I am using firefox on mac.


Dragging with right click works with firefox on linux


Same, latest firefox on windows


Thank you, this looks interesting.


That's a good point, I usually try to teach others to understand my reasoning, so I'll definitely try this approach and see how it goes.


You can upload it to peecho.com, according to their website printing and shipping would be about 50USD in full color. So setting the same 55USD as Amazon would give you a 5USD profit (instead of the 77cents).



Any data to back that up? I've lived all my live in Amsterdam and this is the first time I've heard of this. It sounds made up.


https://decorrespondent.nl/2038/opheldering-verzocht-acht-op...

> We blijven nog even in Münster en Utrecht. Vooral bij geweldscriminaliteit is het contrast pijnlijk: een Nederlandse opheldering van 37 procent tegen een Duitse van 82 procent.

"A bit more about Münster and Utrecht (1). The contrast is especially painful when we compare violent crimes: the Dutch solve 37% while the Germans solve 82%"

Explain that to somebody that got beat up in the streets after a night out for no reason at all. That the police is not doing anything at all to solve it.

1) two cities that are roughly the same size and demographic, so more comparable


Just a small/random additional tidbit...I'd guess that Münster is probably one of the cities in Germany with the most interest in good police work from a PR point of view because the German police university (Deutsche Hochschule der Polizei) is located there :)


Because it's a student city like Utrecht ;)


This might give some insight as to where the 40% comes from (the image shows numbers up to 40%, interestingly) but it's an aggregate number, not violent crimes per se (it's in Dutch but the infographic is about the numbers anyway):

https://www.nrc.nl/nieuws/2016/03/24/een-kaart-om-misdaad-te...

(I'm assuming that you were referring to the percentage given when you asked for data to back "that" up :)


I notice that most of the people who disagree live in Amsterdam. Maybe it's different in other cities. Or in more rural areas.


Those groups are a big trend in places with more tight-knit communities. Amsterdam is quite individualistic and in some ways the city got cleaned up quite a bit compared to the 80s when it was full of heroin junkies. I think the free heroin plan is one of the best things ever.

In rural areas people experience more crime than before and the police is not that willing to solve cases.


Most Dutch people I've met consider Amsterdam to be one of the most dangerous places in the country and prefer to raise kids in more suburban setting. The statistics do say a few other cities are more dangerous, but overall Amsterdam is representative.


I can't think of a better place to raise my kids than Amsterdam, actually. Much better than the dreary suburban town I grew up in.


Instant is a drop-in content management service. You can integrate it on any website by simply adding one line of javascript. Setup takes 30 seconds - and once you’re done, you and your team can edit text, change images and make your website multilingual.

PS: We are currently featured on Product Hunt! https://producthunt.com.

Curious for your thoughts, feedback and remarks!


Take a look at peecho.com, they ship worldwide, are cheaper and don't require you to make it PDF/X-3 compatible.


I’ll take a look! Thanks!


By the way, this is if you want to sell books through their API's. If you just want to order something for yourself they have a separate service where you can upload & buy: http://www.simpleprintservice.com/


Have you tried them? Good results?


They aggregate volume to leverage big printing facilities, so the products you get are really high quality. (I've worked for them a couple of years ago).


We are running a React based static site using https://instant.cm for content management. Works like a charm and Instant basically works on every static site.


It is basically a WYSIWYG editor on steroids, where it is automatically installed on all your texts and images. Any change gets persisted through our service and shown to your visitors on the fly.


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