Technical people can struggle when a choice isn’t a zero or a one.
Technical people can struggle when a choice isn’t a zero or a one.
I mean, I interpreted that as acknowledgement that Lemmy is still 1% the size of Reddit, for example.
… I’m shocked. I thought all development on subsonic had dried up. I used it and dsub for literal years, but switched to Plex after it seemed I was paying for nothing. :(
Uncertain software support is why I picked a P8p over that device, even when I prefer it’s hardware over the P8p.
It’s believable. If 25% of the warrants they receive are for location data, there is a shed load of money to be saved by simply not storing it.
Probably simple math, whether or not the stored location data is more valuable than the cost of legal compliance.
Yes. Cyberpunk and I were oil and water when it was first released. The 2.0 patch made it a different game, and for some magical reason, I jive with it now. It’s one of the best realized worlds. I just finished my first playthrough and I’ll buy the DLC and play again soon!
Oh man, is this true? Last time I daily drove Ubuntu was like 10 years ago. Ubuntu stood for the “it just works” of Linux. That’s so sad they’ve fallen so far.
I guess I’ll wait until Valve rolls a desktop OS.
“Sleep Timer” by CARECON GmbH. Its indispensable for adding a generic sleep timer to any audio or video that does not have such a feature.
Which one? I use “White Noise” by TMSOFT. It’s UI is from 5-7 years ago, but it still works really well. It’s mostly a background noise maker–and has lots of variety–rather than strictly white noise.
Is this article ai generated? It sucks. Are the toxic products all PFAS products? It sure insinuates as much, but doesn’t actually say that. There are lots and lots of “toxic” chemicals; there are over 10k PFAS compounds alone, and toxicity for those is being claimed at ppt levels, which is often lower than can be detected by test methods. Therefore, it’s no wonder they’ll take it slow, rather than eliminate large swaths of the economy without ready replacements.
Terrible article.
I’ve never heard of this. Interesting!
FYI: this is a speculative article; they are guessing and don’t know how it will work, so there are no real details.
Which comes first, the comment or the content?
I’m happy to comment, but (1) it takes a lot of effort to make a good comment, and I’m not sure I regularly have meaningful things to contribute, and (2) many posts are retread memes, reposts, or iterations on slow-moving US political nonsense, and as such not worthy of commenting, and (3) new newsworthy posts are rare.
This is when I browse everything. It’s even worse in my subscribed communities.
That is such a good and sad film.
What about if the product arrives with damaged or missing pieces (and the packaging is fine)? Serious question.
I’m in the same boat. It’s as if they wanted to do original work but we’re scared of going “alone” without the bankability of big-name IP. They changed too much; the names are the same, but it’s not the story I recognize.
I consider it “cheering for the underdog.” When they are no longer the underdog, then the cheering ceases.
I’m thinking of it like the micro plastics that were purposely added to bath wash and soap, and now are banned for use in that purpose. I’m not entirely sure I understand the logic behind why those are (justifiably) banned, but microfiber cloths are not.
My stupid question is because I haven’t seen any other news articles specifically talking about microfiber and its contribution to micro plastics.
I was actually strongly considering a zenphone 10 until this announcement. Now I’m wary that the already-short software support will be even shorter.
Have you even looked at the computer electronics business? Or lived a few decades? Otherwise how can you have no experience of a company deciding your use of a product doesn’t meet THEIR expectations and so they invalidate your warranty claim? Heck, look at what Intel is doing right now with its 13 and 14 series chips.
Legality is nothing without enforcement, and there’s like none of that for warranties in the US, and even less for global companies with overseas HQs.