@juergenhassler Felt as bad as the iOS 7 release. Text in many places is unreadable, and shiny borders overwhelm the content within them. I’m not a fan, the phone must be functional, not just “pretty”, like the ultra-thin Helvetica back in the day.
@NilsEdison@claudioguglieri@PrincipleApp is still great if you need to test quick animations and interactions. Why spend hours when you can do it in minutes using Principle? That being said, it’s sad that they abandoned the project because it still has its place even today.
@thisisgrey@AREdotNA Agree, I asked @broskoski about it after the update, and he replied, “It's a Safari thing: https://t.co/H7B5q6PbJo. We're working on it.”
@XRPwallets@MRW68906 I spent some time digging and found that tweet for you. Just wanted to be sure that what I was saying is correct information.
https://t.co/aV1NqTwucN
@SirClownSniper@_lonedd@Leerzeit@ScamDetective5@JohnEDeaton1 My recollection is that lawyers for his family's estate had a key to his account but no idea what to do with it. One thing I can say with absolute certainty is that if his account's sole key had died with him, his XRP would have too.
@XRPwallets You should search through @JoelKatz's replies. Someone blamed Ripple for being able to access other people's XRP in regards to the Mellon situation, but he explained that they actually had the keys; they just didn't know how to use them, so they went to Ripple for help.
@XRPwallets I see that, but I would like to see the final destination wallets with billions of XRP. Where does the XRP go? It can't just vanish from the blockchain, no matter where it goes.
@XRPwallets That's just a Bitstamp wallet. You're saying that 97.5% of XRP is Ripple-owned, which I believe (maybe), but I would like to see where all those billions of XRP sit. It's a blockchain; everything is visible.