Basic blender went bad (motor ran but spindle wasn't rotating). I wanted to disassemble to see if it could be repaired. Three of the four screws were Phillips head. I had to cut the casing open in order to discover why I couldn't unscrew the fourth. It was a slotted spanner.
When you're harvesting the blood iron of your enemies you don't have time for ethics. A controlled study managed 4 weeks within ethical boundaries, maybe we can cut that in half unethically. So 14 days, 3000 . 14 = 115 years. So when you torture two people, you could manage to do 58 years. Better start early!
I'm so used to roundabouts and red lights. They're annoying for the lone driver, but add a bit of traffic and they move everything along so much smoother.
Probably jumpstarting your career, after a few years it doesn't really matter anymore, but in those first years in a field you'll probably get a bit further.
In my experience its more about learning how to dive really deep into one subject, but you'll have many subjects in your life and applying those learned skills to your work.
It would, it has, next step after DMCA even in the EU is legal action, which nintendo already fought in court. I don't know about you but I'm not ready to defend someone else's code in court.
Comment OP is forking Yuzu code, we're talking about how this is fair or unfair. When you fork DMCA'd code you open yourself up to litigation and having to defend someone else's code in court.
I won't, OP might. Did you actually not read the context before replying? Lol.
Ontario Human Rights Tribunal says National Service Dogs did not discriminate when it took pet from a Mississauga home, where it was a companion animal to an autistic girl
"But muh disability", the service worked with them for 3 years trying to make the dog healthier, instead the poor thing got fatter and developed stress injuries
Yeah I'm no physicist but that ticked me off, the speed of light is the same for any wavelength. As for redshift:
a redshift is an increase in the wavelength, and corresponding decrease in the frequency and photon energy, of electromagnetic radiation (such as light).
Speed of light isn't a factor in this, also when galaxy's move towards us (like the Andromeda galaxy) it is blueshifted, proving it's not the light that matters, but rather the direction of movement of the source. Proving the doppler effect.
I've explored a few platforms within the Fediverse, but most of them seem to be inspired by and mimic existing mainstream social media platforms like Twitter, Reddit, and Facebook. While this familiarity can be comforting, I can't help but wonder if there are any truly innovative and original platforms out there that offer a...
I think social media is a solved problem at this point, you'll need something radical or game changing to actually break through in this market. Combined with the fact that the fediverse is inherently much more difficult to monetize I don't see many companies taking on that challenge.
FOSS projects might though, but they tend to grow too slow to be disruptive.
I'm thinking the same way smartphones are solved where only small increments of improvement happen. Radical changes happenen, like folding phones or the rise of Tiktok. Some have long lasting problems like the former, but the latter managed to pick a fight with the giants and come out on top.
Back to market terms, they're mature but new players have proven to disrupt the market. When the general public start caring about privacy, federated social media will rise. Seeing how that is quite a politicised thing, progress will be slow. I'd love to be proven wrong though.
In response to Bray’s toot, Evan Prodromou — one of the creators of ActivityPub, who is currently writing an O’Reilly book about the protocol — noted that this “is also the argument for using the ActivityPub API.” He described the API as “an open, extensible API that can handle any kind of activity type — not...
convenience thing first and a privacy thing second
This is convenience and privacy, with a SolidPod you decide who stores the data. It could be you, it could be any federated instance, but that data is encrypted and you decide which application can use which data. They use a WebID (see this as a hash of your unique profile) to identify the user and this would be the only data that is shared between you and any federated instance.
You're going to love SolidPods, honestly. From the website:
Solid is a specification that lets individuals and groups store their data securely in decentralized data stores called Pods. Pods are like secure web servers for data. When data is stored in a Pod, its owners control which people and applications can access it.
I see no possible way that a centralized identity can be more private that an array of separate ones.
Check out the specifications as well, using Pods you could have seperate accounts on every platform linked only by the ability to login using your Pod.
I recognize this will vary depending on how much you self-host, so I'm curious about the range of experiences from the few self-hosted things to the many self-hosted things....
I get it, the inventory is just a list of all servers and PC you are trying to manage and the playbooks contain every step you would take if you would configure everything manually.
I'll be honest when you first set it up it's daunting but that's the thing! You only need to do it once, then you can deploy and redeploy anything you have in minutes.
deal with your kid constantly wanting to use your phone
They are being 'needlessly judgemental' about this line, you can fret over the importance of having 100% control over the device (which is weird to me as well but that's besides the point), having your kid conditioned to constantly want your phone is what people are calling you out for.
Read your own words, you'd rather give your child a phone than deal with your child wanting yours. That is exactly what you said, no assumptions needed.
Next time start with that instead of giving them a phone because that's easier than dealing with the child, people might not get their knickers in a twist.
You are fully aware ipad babies are a widespread phenomenon? Those people use that exact wording to justify doing so, you can blame people for throwing you under the bus alongside those people, but you also could've just worded that more carefully.
As someone who used reddit for 14+ years, this place feels exactly like early Reddit, a place where you actually can converse with anyone and contribute instead of yelling into the void. Realistically we will always have both, but many more will join the verse everytime Reddit has an oopsie.
Cave Johnson here, and I'll be getting straight to the point. We need you! Measuring your human brain activity while you solve our test chambers is vital to the advancement of AI robotics. You need food? We got loads! You need housing? Our facilities have unlimited scaling capacity! Take that banks! So sign up today at apertureprogram@openai.com
I know there are other ways of accomplishing that, but this might be a convenient way of doing it. I'm wondering though if Reddit is still reverting these changes?
LLMs are all crap, and people are slowly realising this
LLM's have already changed the tech space more than anything else for the last 10 years at least. I get what you're trying to say but that opinion will age like milk.
You might be missing the point. Again, the EU will send them a bill and a firm letter, but they don't have any authority to actually demand payment. That fact has nothing to do with GDPR but with the fact that it's an entirely different sovereignty.
The EU could sue them, they could impose sanctions on other companies for dealing with said company. They have an enormous amount of power to make sure said company can never deal with anything EU related. They have tried to sue companies in the US for not complying but no outcome for that is known.
That is why you see the cookie notices and general compliance, but also if you're a relatively small company it's actually not that hard to comply. It gets exponentially more difficult the larger you get but if you're that large than you'll definitely be dealing with world economics, including the EU which gives a lot of incentive to comply.
if actually read up what GDPR is
I have and was a part of my curriculum. Bit arrogant innit
qt π ( mander.xyz )
Obscure screw added so appliance cannot be disassembled ( lemmy.world )
Basic blender went bad (motor ran but spindle wasn't rotating). I wanted to disassemble to see if it could be repaired. Three of the four screws were Phillips head. I had to cut the casing open in order to discover why I couldn't unscrew the fourth. It was a slotted spanner.
Iron ( mander.xyz )
xkcd #2932: Driving PSA ( imgs.xkcd.com )
https://xkcd.com/2932...
It is with great pleasure to inform you that today I graduate with my Master of Science in Information Technology!
I’ve done IT. I’ve finally mastered IT (couldn’t resist 😁)....
The youth's slang is so hard to keep up with... ( lemmy.world )
Windows 7 ( lemmy.basedcount.com )
Nintendo DMCA Notice Wipes Out 8,535 Yuzu Repos, Mig Switch Also Targeted. ( torrentfreak.com )
Always check under your bed rule ( lemmy.blahaj.zone )
Medieval Doomsday Weapon ( lemmy.world )
And I don't care if you don't get it. I get it.
Service dog removed from Ontario home because it got too fat ( www.sootoday.com )
Ontario Human Rights Tribunal says National Service Dogs did not discriminate when it took pet from a Mississauga home, where it was a companion animal to an autistic girl
Doppler Effect ( xkcd.com )
The Doppler effect is a mysterious wavelength-shifting phenomenon which seems to primarily affect sirens, which is why the 🚨 emoji is red.
How do you listen to / discover music?
Trust issues ( sh.itjust.works )
Are there any innovative platforms in the Fediverse?
I've explored a few platforms within the Fediverse, but most of them seem to be inspired by and mimic existing mainstream social media platforms like Twitter, Reddit, and Facebook. While this familiarity can be comforting, I can't help but wonder if there are any truly innovative and original platforms out there that offer a...
just say no!! ( mander.xyz )
One Login: Towards a Single Fediverse Identity on ActivityPub ( thenewstack.io )
In response to Bray’s toot, Evan Prodromou — one of the creators of ActivityPub, who is currently writing an O’Reilly book about the protocol — noted that this “is also the argument for using the ActivityPub API.” He described the API as “an open, extensible API that can handle any kind of activity type — not...
Funkwhale - A platform for all your audio ( www.funkwhale.audio )
Funkwhale - A platform for all your audio
How much maintenance do you find your self-hosting involves?
I recognize this will vary depending on how much you self-host, so I'm curious about the range of experiences from the few self-hosted things to the many self-hosted things....
RULE!xkcdRULE! ( lemmy.blahaj.zone )
I shaved for the first time in a while so I could update a profile picture and my chin looks like this. ( lemmy.world )
I don't particularly want my new profile to have that meth chic look.
UK: Almost a quarter of kids aged 5-7 have smartphones ( www.bbc.com )
fucking beautiful. almost a year into the 'verse and its starting to become more functional than that R place... better than i imagined.
As if we need another reason to switch to GNU/Linux ( lemmy.ca )
They are the same. ( lemmy.world )
Reddit Will License Its Data to Train LLMs, So We Made a Firefox Extension That Lets You Replace Your Comments With Any (Non-Copyrighted) Text ( theluddite.org )
I know there are other ways of accomplishing that, but this might be a convenient way of doing it. I'm wondering though if Reddit is still reverting these changes?
Ultimate Evolution ( mander.xyz )
This is a level of innovation that only certified geniuses could come up with ( files.ioc.exchange )
(Originally published on ioc.exchange: 2024-03-05) - Click the Fedi-Link to visit.
Someone needs to be reminded that anticompetitive practices are illegal ( feddit.de )
Jellyfin 10.9 Coming Soon! ( lemmy.ca )
Release target is tentatively mid April according to here..
Nightmare on Lemmy Street (A Fediverse GDPR Horror Story) - Michael Altfield's Tech Blog ( tech.michaelaltfield.net )