Not sure why that is although, admittedly, I've had little time to do much in the way of cross-browser testing. The website features some pretty heavy WebGL visualizations. I've pushed an updated version with more aggressive code-splitting and a <noscript /> version of the website. If you'd like, try it out and let me know if it works any better.
Apologies for this — the website features some pretty heavy WebGL visualizations. I've pushed an updated version with more aggressive code-splitting and a <noscript /> version of the website. If you'd like, try it out and let me know if it works any better.
The website features a platform for exploring over 1,000 "NSO-related activities, and demonstrates new connections and patterns between ‘digital violence’ using Pegasus and real-world violence directed at lawyers, activists, and other civil society figures":
https://www.digitalviolence.org/#/explore
You realize that 1) the website is critical to the NSO group, and 2) you can have more than one separate/independent browser session on your computer to browser stuff on your computer?
Forensic architecture is known for years to make visually fancy stuff (e.g. the films and exhibitions which they show for roughly the past decade in the art context throughout Europe, for example at the last Documenta). For them to develope a website that uses a lot of javascript is somewhat ironic, but not surprising.
Sublime Text's themes are stored in /Users/.../Library/Application Support/Sublime Text 2/Packages/Color Scheme-Default (on the Mac). Just copy and paste.