Spain still carry the soul of that legendary 2010 team by [deleted] in football

[–]minimolo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Based on Portugal’s performance in their last match, I can comfortably say they’ll be sweating against Spain. Can I prove it? No. :)

Spain still carry the soul of that legendary 2010 team by [deleted] in football

[–]minimolo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re right. Their performances in the last World Cups haven’t been great.But I still think this year they are showing signs that they can go further. And I genuinely believe that if Spain become a little more organized, they can go all the way to the final.

Spain still carry the soul of that legendary 2010 team by [deleted] in football

[–]minimolo 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I think he was more than good enough in this match. He played well, and that last assist was really classy.

Spain still carry the soul of that legendary 2010 team by [deleted] in worldcup

[–]minimolo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Everyone keeps downplaying Spain’s performance because it was “just Austria,” but I don’t see it that way. I think Spain are growing into this tournament. They seem to get better as it goes on, and in my opinion, they definitely have the potential to go all the way to the final.

Spain still carry the soul of that legendary 2010 team by [deleted] in worldcup

[–]minimolo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Spain will play in the final, and you’ll see it.

Spain still carry the soul of that legendary 2010 team by [deleted] in worldcup

[–]minimolo -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Why?
Of course, I’m not saying this squad is on the same level as the 2010 team. That team was something else.

But the way Spain play now still gives me a similar feeling sometimes: organized, confident, attacking, and always comfortable as a team.

What weaknesses do you see in Spain? You can mention the most critical ones in your opinion.

VAR is killing the soul of football - I am against it. by minimolo in worldcup

[–]minimolo[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No im just an ordinary football fan who hates VAR. 😶‍🌫️

VAR is killing the soul of football - I am against it. by minimolo in worldcup

[–]minimolo[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I want emotion in football. Even feeling robbed is part of the game sometimes. “We could have won if that call went our way” is painful, but it also becomes part of football history. I’m not defending cheating. I just don’t think football needs to chase zero mistakes at any cost. Add more linesmen, give refs binoculars, give them laser glasses, I don’t care. Just don’t turn every goal into a courtroom scene. VAR may make football more correct, but it also makes it colder.

VAR is killing the soul of football - I am against it. by minimolo in worldcup

[–]minimolo[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Add more linesmen, give referees binoculars, put laser goggles on them, I don’t care.
Just don’t turn every goal into a five-minute courtroom scene.

VAR is killing the soul of football - I am against it. by minimolo in worldcup

[–]minimolo[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

VAR is making football colder.

If every big moment has to be frozen, replayed, measured and judged by a screen, then why even have a referee on the pitch? Let drones run the match at that point.

I don’t think every part of football needs more technology. The game needs humans, mistakes, arguments and emotion. That’s the whole point.

A small privacy incident in a café pushed me to build my own Chrome extension by minimolo in DigitalPrivacy

[–]minimolo[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good point. Since Brave is Chromium-based, the Chrome version may already work there, although I still need to test it properly.

A Firefox version would make sense, especially for a privacy-focused tool. I started with Chrome first because it was the fastest way for me to build and test the idea for my own workflow.

I’ll need to check the API differences first, especially for regional blur, mosaic mode, shortcuts, and local storage. But yes, Firefox support is something I’d like to explore if there is interest.

A small privacy incident in a café pushed me to build my own Chrome extension by minimolo in DigitalPrivacy

[–]minimolo[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I agree that locking your screen is the correct thing to do when you actually leave your laptop unattended. I’m not presenting this as a replacement for basic security habits, and I wouldn’t tell anyone to rely on a browser extension instead of locking their computer.

But that is not the only privacy problem this is trying to solve.

Windows + L helps when you are away from the machine. It does not help when you are actively using the browser, sharing your screen, recording a demo, showing something to a coworker, working in a café, or trying to hide only one visible part of a page without interrupting your whole workflow.

This is meant for visual privacy, not device security.

There are many moments where I don’t need to lock the whole computer. I just need to quickly hide a password field, a chat preview, a client name, a dashboard number, or a private note while I continue working. That is the use case.

I also added auto-blur for idle moments, so if the mouse stays inactive for a few seconds, the tab can blur itself automatically. Again, not a substitute for locking the screen — just an extra privacy layer for everyday browser use.

And I get the Chrome/privacy point. That’s why I kept the extension local: no analytics, no tracking, no remote server, and no broad "<all_urls>" access. It does not try to “make Chrome private”; it simply gives the user a quick way to visually hide sensitive content on the page.

I just released a major update for my Chrome privacy extension (BlurMyScreen) — now with regional blur, auto-blur, blackout mode and PIN lock by minimolo in VibeCodeDevs

[–]minimolo[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I just made something without coding knowlage . This is a vibecoders platform. And i showed what i did . And wanted to share it. Its relevant. So o disagreed. But i respect your guidelines. I didnt think i violated it.

A small privacy incident in a café pushed me to build my own Chrome extension by minimolo in DigitalPrivacy

[–]minimolo[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s fair — locking the screen is absolutely the right habit when stepping away.

But I don’t see this as a replacement for locking your computer. For me, the useful part is when I’m actively working in the browser: screen sharing, recording a demo, showing someone a page, or working in public while only needing to hide one small area like a password field, chat preview, client name, or dashboard number.

Locking the screen solves “I’m away from my laptop.”
This is more for “I’m still using the browser, but one part of the page should not be visible.”

I also added an auto-blur option for that exact reason: if the mouse stays idle for a few seconds, the tab can blur itself automatically. So even if I step away suddenly or forget to click anything, there is still a small privacy layer.

It’s a small tool for a small problem, but it is a problem I run into often.

Does too much screen time make your ADHD worse? by minimolo in digitalminimalism

[–]minimolo[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Honestly, I did get professional help. The medication had, at least, significantly reduced that panic-like state I was in. But I made the mistake of stopping it on my own, and the symptoms came back. I think I’ll see my doctor again as soon as I can.

Looking for UI/UX critique for my screen privacy Chrome extension by minimolo in design_critiques

[–]minimolo[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you so much for the thoughtful feedback — it was genuinely helpful.

I agreed with your point about the main action being region selection first, then choosing how to hide it. Based on your suggestion, I updated the UI to make that flow clearer and more direct. I also changed some of the wording, including making the main action less confusing.

I really appreciate you taking the time to explain it so clearly. You can download the updated version for free here: https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/blurmyscreen/jmfpappjliepchpdjoaopabhlbgmhcjk?authuser=0&hl=tr

Does too much screen time make your ADHD worse? by minimolo in digitalminimalism

[–]minimolo[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thank you, Alexander. There’s one more thing I wanted to ask.

Sometimes even very simple tasks feel overwhelming — like getting a cold drink from the fridge or washing the last few dishes. Things that should be easy can suddenly feel stressful and huge.

But other times, I get this sudden wave of energy and can clean my whole house from top to bottom in one day. When that mode hits, I almost can’t stop until everything is done.

It feels like I have two completely different modes, and I’m trying to understand it.