Here in Sweden it's obligatory (by law)[1] to fortify some foods (dairy products) with vitamin D. Both adults and children are notorious dairy consumers. So I don't think that assumption holds.
> Firefox supports pure css masonry grid behind a flag.
That has less support than Bieber at a black metal festival though.
Here's[1] the columns (or flexbox) way of doing it. Note that images will be a bit strangely ordered (as you would read columns). That's not solvable without JS (AFAIK). That's why W3C/CSSWG is looking at possible solutions[2] that resulted in the Firefox experiment you're referencing.
I have been porting the extension to Firefox, but I ran into a problem with getDisplayMedia (to record the screen). Apparently it can only be run through a user gesture (DOM event), but I have to run it from the background script in order to be persistent at all times, no matter if the popup is closed or the user closes or navigates away from certain tabs. It explains the lack of screen recorders for Firefox, the few I found have the workaround of opening a separate tab with a button to start recording, but it is extremely counter-intuitive, plus if the user closes that tab at any time, the recording would automatically stop. Here's the discussion in the repo if you'd like to share your thoughts, I could do that same workaround myself but I'm not fond of releasing an unintuitive product: https://github.com/alyssaxuu/screenity/issues/3#issuecomment...
> The problem is that people who work on some specific fields (music, cinema, graphics) have almost no choice when choosing OS and computer.
Came here to say that.
> Most of them won't even care about sending too much data to a company if that's the price to have the same device everyone else is using in their industry...
I do, I truly do care. So much that I'm looking at open-source/Linux options, at least for my home projects. Doesn't look very bright on the video side, but DaVinci Resolve is at least available for Linux. Rawtherapee is getting there with local adjustments as we speak. Darktable has lots of power but terrible UX.
[1] https://translate.google.com/translate?hl=&sl=sv&tl=en&u=htt...