Wonder if this means alert dialogs will start showing up from ads in embedded webviews. Window.alert() didn't work in Android's webview and the WebChrome client was the workaround.
The bus factor is the total number of key developers who would need to be incapacitated (as by getting hit by a bus/truck) to send the project into such disarray that it would not be able to proceed; the project would retain information (such as source code) with which no remaining team member is familiar.
When I work on windows, I just use cygwin with the mintty shell to get productive with a familiar look&feel. What am I missing with this setup that Wish fills?
A lot of Windows users (like myself) are somewhat committed to tools like Powershell in addition to Cygwin. I currently keep both Git Bash and Powershell open so I can switch back and forth as needed. Wish allows me to switch between these seemlessly with a common set of features across both.
Here's a chart of stats by industry that MailChimp published -
http://mailchimp.com/resources/research/email-marketing-benc...
for reference. As petercooper said the industry isn't the best breakdown to compare against. It's probably more helpful to benchmark your own campaigns using A/B and optimize for your goal.
To me, one big driver of whether I will open unsolicited mail is how often that sender sends something out. If I am getting email from you 3 or 4 times a week, it's almost guaranteed to be going straight into the trash. Not only am I not opening it, I'm not really even reading the subject line.
Once a week is borderline. Once a month is probably about right. Don't abuse your subscriber's time.
Speaking of themes, how easy is it to customize the look&feel of the login prompt? It may be odd for the user to see an entirely different site when they try to sign-in to a site.