I think the eventual limitations on 3rd party apps are coming. A major part of the community has used/ is using the superior 3rd party alternatives, and they need to figure out how to nullify those advantages. It is inevitable because they want that sweet advertisement money for which 3rd party apps are a barrier.
My home city has metro coaches with either yellow or white lights. Me and a few friends of mine would skip the white ones because we found the yellow ones more comforting. On the other hand, my dad prefers white and in a room with types of lighting he will always go for the white ones.
I like daylight bulbs as well, living in Germany they are a lifesaver because it is cloudy all day and dark at 3-4PM in the winter. However in the evening, around 8PM, I change over to the yellow hued ones. Best of both worlds.
I prefer natural white lights. I don't light rooms with them, but the light that terrarium/vivarium bulbs made to mimic sunlight give off is sublime IMO.
I agree with you about most parts; specially about more calories = delicious food.
However, most Indian dishes have a restaurant version and a home-made version. The former is enriched with all kind of ingredients that make it heavy and calorie rich but super tasty while the latter is simpler and more suitable as daily food.
Dal makhani is usually a "party dish" which is not consumed on a regular basis. However, it too has a simpler version that is not loaded with butter and cream.
I'm Indian and for me saag is "leafy greens" too. Spinach to be more particular.
The thing is that in India some meanings change with geography and location. For example, for me bhujia meant this [1] for the longest time. However, when I moved to a different part of the country, bhujia also meant potato fritters. Then, there is bhaji which means fried veggies. But some people also call potato fritters as bhaji.
In the U.K. (at least while I was growing up) we had ‘Bombay mix’[1] which included your version of bhujia.
Bhaji and Pakora seem to be interchangeable in British-Indian cuisine. If the bulk is onion it’s called a bhaji, otherwise pakora.
Halwa is another one that can be wildly different, it seems. Though most parts of the world have their own version I guess, all irresistible but very different.
That article actually identifies certain actions of male programmers that it credits with the reason most programmers are male today. That's certainly not known. The article is just a sexist rant.
How about taking explicit consent before tracking users and not tracking them everywhere they go (both digitally and physically)? Users should expect a right to privacy and control over their own data.
In all fairness most users are willing to trade their privacy for access or features. Most users already give away almost all of their rights and accept terms of service blindly so they can access sites.