The same is true for Europe. I've never had an issue returning items on Amazon, whether they're for personal or business use (where you don't have the right to return items). The same goes for local and European chains.
I really like Rye and have used it a lot. Lately I've been using pixi more and more because of its cross-platform locking support, since I develop on Mac and deploy mostly to Linux. It also supports all cobda packages, which can be a big advantage.
Unfortunately it still doesn't expose Brotli [1], which should be already in web browsers due to `Content-Encoding: br`. There is a very roundabout way to decompress a Brotli stream though, and that's how I've got a typing game into 1 KB of JavaScript [2] back in 2022.
Just yesterday I was looking to play around with webGPU and found the 1.8 release page. I had no idea it was removed. I hope that webGPU will gain adaptation as the best cross platform system. The incompatibility between platforms for openGL or Vulkan always made me not want to learn it.
I recently tried to create an executable from a Python script, Mac and Windows worked wonderfully, on Linux I had massive problems when I tried to run it in a different system then it was packaged. Linux caused the most problems, in the end I decided it was not worth it, 99% use Windows or Mac anyway.
Looks pretty awesome. I'm currently using rye for locking, but unfortunately it only creates a lock file for the current OS. Which makes it not ideal for cross-platform Python development. Torch, for example, has different dependencies on Mac and Linux.
Interesting that GBP has a volume of 413 million and EUR 420 million, I would have assumed that EUR is much bigger than GBP, does anyone know why they are so close?
Also, interesting that the top conversion is GBP -> EUR.