- Fix unnecessarily excessive spacing around "li > article" entry data
(was due to containment)
- Aesthetic tweak: ugly underline between microformat u-photo and p-name
- Make CSS file smaller by using some microformats2 classnames instead
of microdata attributes.
- Remove unnecessary elements from attribute selectors wherever it
improves compression.
- Dark theme: prevent active link color from being overridden.
- Sort properties/attributes to improve compression ratios.
- Bump font size from 109% to 109.375% so the default font size hits
17.5px and we get nice round numbers.
- Add a bunch of new stuff from WAI-Coga's coga-usable doc
- Update outdated CSP example
- Rephrasings
- Elaborate on use of CSS containment
- More on the virtues of URL underlines
- MS Edge does not support AVIF
- More skip-link guidance
- guidance on keeping important content above the fold
- Reference a WebKit bug
Now that css containment has dramatically improved large-page
performance, I can crank up the chromium throttling during lighthouse
runs to ensure no perf regressions.
Copy what tantek did by using h-pronoun to link to pronoun.is and
combining p-pronouns (plural) with p-pronoun (singular). Seems to be
supported by some implementations such as Authl.
This also entailed re-writing my "about" page's def-lists in raw HTML,
which was probably long overdue.
FeedValidator was fixed upstream; it doesn't use an allowlist of (X)HTML
attributes anymore. After updating FeedValidator to the latest commit, I
don't need to filter out false-positives for these attributes.
The FeedValidator commit that resolved the issue:
0b130bd5d7
- I don't log IP addresses when you use my Tor hidden service (duh)
- Fix bad timestamp
- Better summary on the top
- Rephrasing
- Mention that webring links do actually send a referring domain