Not sure if this belongs here, or in science--
Scientists succeed in reaching milestone in artificial womb tech. Keep lambs alive for over a month in artificial amnionic sac.
http://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2017/04/25/525044286/scientists-create-artificial-womb-that-could-help-prematurely-born-babies
Cool shit.
In a *smack your forehead so hard a painting fell off the wall next door* type of moment I may have found a ray of hope for the new firefox setup. I can't find any signs that they're deprecating userChrome.css completely, just removing the addons that go through the XUL/XPCom system.
@namespace url("http://www.mozilla.org/keymaster/gatekeeper/there.is.only.xul"); /* only needed once */
#reader-mode-button,
#readinglist-addremove-button {
display:none !important;
}
#TabsToolbar {
font-size: 16px !important;
height: 22px !important;
max-width: 1040px !important
-moz-box-ordinal-group: 21 !important;
margin-top: -4px !important;
margin-right: 800px !important;
}
#nav-bar {
font-size: 16px !important;
height: 22px !important;
min-height: 1px !important;
max-width: 800px !important;
margin-top: -22px !important;
margin-left: 1040px !important;
}
#urlbar .urlbar-textbox-container {
height: 20px !important;
margin-top: -8px !important;
}
Naturally someone who has different screen sizes/browser width/desired tab-to-urlbar-ratio would want to change the margin values there, but really I can't figure out at this point why I went through the process of using two different addons for a while (hide caption titlebar plus and classic theme restorer) and later just the CTR add-on for something I could accomplish with 30 lines in a .css file.
https://blog.mozilla.org/addons/2017/02/16/the-road-to-firefox-57-compatibility-milestones/comment-page-1/#comment-223635'Will userChrome.css and userContent.css still be working in Firefox 57 and up?'
"I don’t know of any plans to remove support for them."
'It is my understanding that using css code to modify the UI won’t be allowed. If true what can a person place in userChrome.css that would be allowed?'
"As long as it is supported, you can add any CSS like before. You just won’t be able to do it from an add-on."
So I guess the lesson is: if you can manage to slap some rules in a text file, don't panic?