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Unofficial patches are also sometimes called fan patches or community patches, and are typically intended to repair unresolved bugs and provide technical compatibility fixes, e.g. for newer operating systems, increased display resolutions [8] [9] or new display formats.
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 9 March 2025. For satirical news, see List of satirical news websites. This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources. Fake news websites are those which intentionally, but not necessarily solely ...
Unofficial community builds became available as early as on August 23, 2013, [7] with the first official builds made available in October 2013. [8] On July 12, 2014, Tox entered an alpha stage in development and a redesigned download page was created for the occasion.
If your third-party email app is having issues connecting, sending, or receiving emails, you may need to reconfigure your account or update the app. Use these steps to identify and fix the source of the problem. Troubleshoot any problems with your account
existence at the time of saving of linked internal pages; date and time of the last edit before saving; in the Image namespace (Image description pages): the image itself, the image history and the list of pages linking to the image; in the Category namespace: the lists of subcategories and pages in the category.
In May 2012 security researchers noticed that new updates of WhatsApp sent messages with encryption, [40] [41] [42] but described the cryptographic method used as "broken." [43] [44] In August of the same year, the WhatsApp support staff stated that messages sent in the "latest version" of the WhatsApp software for iOS and Android (but not BlackBerry, Windows Phone, and Symbian) were encrypted ...
Occasionally this caching scheme goes awry (e.g. the browser insists on showing out-of-date content) making it necessary to bypass the cache, thus forcing your browser to re-download a web page's complete, up-to-date content. This is sometimes referred to as a "hard refresh", "cache refresh", or "uncached reload".
I notice that the monthly dump of enwiki "Articles, templates, media/file descriptions, and primary meta-pages" (e.g. as found at dumps.wikimedia.org /enwiki /20120403) is available as 27 XML files (e.g. starting with "enwiki-20120403-pages-articles1.xml-p000000010p000010000.bz2" and ending with "enwiki-20120403-pages-articles27.xml ...