Also if say you have image/animation/audio/video link without extension (e.g.: .jpg), you can fool Lemmy using a fragment identifier at the end of URL #.jpg which would usually be used to jump to the fragment id in document. e.g.: https://example.org/image#.jpg
“Best viewed with Netscape navigator”
The image embed doesn’t work. Lemmy supports embedding media only if HTTPS is used. This website is HTTP.
I already fixed it, but I didn’t know that! That’s really cool!
You can also embed images inside links, by the way (click the button):
[![Get Firefox](https://i.imgur.com/KpmYhB1.gif)](https://getfirefox.com)
Also if say you have image/animation/audio/video link without extension (e.g.: .jpg), you can fool Lemmy using a fragment identifier at the end of URL
#.jpg
which would usually be used to jump to the fragment id in document. e.g.:https://example.org/image#.jpg
Wowzers that’s fancy, I’ll have to save that for the future
it’s not just lemmy; HTTPS websites aren’t allowed to serve HTTP content
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Security/Mixed_content
Sorry, my bad. And thanks for the info.
No worries, I find the intricacies of protocols like this super interesting 😊
Vatican website