Ah good. Now I know what specs not to buy.
Ah good. Now I know what specs not to buy.
One thing about the pre-Internet times I don’t hear much about is how much more centralised our media were and how, as a result, people or ideas on the fringe of society didn’t get much attention. That includes for instance how the strange ideas about vaccines or ethnic groups now spread much easier than they did before the Internet, but also how trans* people and other marginalised groups find it much easier to find and support each other and be a united front against oppression.
In summary, I don’t thing that what has been termed “the great awokening”, nor the organised opposition against it, could have taken place before the Internet. At least not at this scale.
Sadly Microsoft didn’t specify where on the keyboard the key has to be.
In order to find out, hit the keyboard with your head; wherever your forehead touches the keyboard first is where the key is supposed to be.
Yeah, I deserve that. I’m just gonna leave my typo. Thanks for the laugh!
1024 = 210
FYFY
The tweet wasn’t easily available on nitter (it wasn’t being highlighted).
It just so happened to be the canonical source for this piece of information. And it wasn’t being run by an antisemite at the time the linked tweet was being written.
Exactly. The good kind of failure.
Hyperloop was always a project to sabotage high-speed rail. Good thing it failed.
Seeing as they melt the stuff, I’m not sure the grains need to be rounded.
The problem for chipmakers is not the sourcing of materials itself, but the purity of the sourced material. So don’t worry about public beaches disappearing into Intel’s hopper-feeder.
I have one (came with my display) and it works really well. Plus it’s safe for their nanotextured displays (which are sensitive to having their nanotexturing worn off by cloth that’s even mildly abrasive).
One idea to prevent tags being spammed would be to have them be moderated as well. Thoughts?
As I’m saying, I don’t think you need to: manually subscribing to each trusted instance via ActivityPub should suffice. The pass/fail determination can be done when querying for known images.
How about a federated system for sharing “known safe” image attestations? That way, the trust list is something managed locally by each participating instance.
Edit: thinking about it some more, a federated image classification system would allow some instances to be more strict than others.
Nowadays macOS maximises like Windows does. Whether that’s “doing it right” is something else entirely.
Mac OS (…) was okay, but reliant on the global menu and weird drop-downs.
See Fitt’s law for why the Mac’s menu bar is the way it is.
Having multiple sufficiently-powered virtual machines makes OS development really low friction. Though I’d personally go for a blade subrack instead.