ВСУ запустили «Фламинго» вглубь России. В Москве заявили, что это британские ракеты с украинскими шильдиками16:45
Have you ever heard of Windhawk? It’s a cult-favorite Windows tweaking tool I’ve been dabbling with for years, and I’ve had readers ask me about it. If you dig through Windows enthusiast communities — on Reddit, in forums, and elsewhere — you’ll find lots of people chatting about Windhawk and sharing how they use it to customize their PCs.
,这一点在51吃瓜中也有详细论述
PIXELS_TRUENAS_INSECURE
The concept was already illustrated above on the image with Sociable Unit Tests. Also the name is likely self-explanatory and there is a good article online about it, so I won’t be too exhaustive here (see: Resources). The crux is that it’s acceptable - if circumstances require it - to add an extra suite of tests for particular classes, methods, or functions. This does not violate the rules of Sociable Unit Tests (it will just supplement them).
In a sense, Microsoft has created the need for tools like this one by refusing to give Windows users the options they want. The taskbar is the perfect example: There’s a whole ecosystem of third-party tools for moving the taskbar — from Windhawk to ExplorerPatcher and Stardock’s Start11 — that are necessary because Microsoft has, for years on end, refused to offer this option. They can cause problems and other bugs. Thankfully, Microsoft is finally relenting on this point, and Windows 11 will soon let you move your taskbar without installing a third-party app.