I find it hard to see how Notch is a victim though. He sold the game to Microsoft, willingly giving up control of it. And with 3.7 million followers and a billion in the bank he doesn't seemed to have suffered much.
"Mild irritation" isn't much of a qualification for victimhood.
Non-replacable batteries should be illegal. Aside from anything else it makes recycling or even safe disposal of e-waste difficult, because lithium batteries are quite dangerous.
Thanks for sharing. I've had a similar experience with the odd good day. I have to be careful not to go nuts on those days because it will make it all worse later.
The EU likes putting stickers on products. For example, when you buy a vacuum cleaner there is a sticker showing how well it cleans on carpet and on hard floors, how much dust it emits from the exhaust, how much energy it uses, and how loud it is. When you get on a plane there is a sticker that shows how efficient it is on an A-G scale.
So why not put a repairability sticker on electronics? iPods get a G rank, high glue content, expected lifetime 18 months before the battery reaches 80% capacity.
This is an exciting line of research. If they can find a way to dull pain permanently it could help a lot of people with chronic pain. It's hard to describe to people who don't have it just had debilitating it can be. Even relatively low levels of pain have a huge effect if they are constant.
Yes, she burns herself quite often while cooking and doesn't notice until the smell of searing flesh reaches her nostrils. In fact she only found out about it when she went for an x-ray and they found she had severe hip problems but hadn't noticed due to lack of pain.
Quite how they didn't realize when she apparently experienced no pain during childbirth is a bit of a mystery.
Maybe you assume everything is recorded all the time, but most people don't. For example, they don't assume that their phones are constantly recording video and making it available to Apple/Google/Samsung because even if that wasn't illegal in many places it would destroy the battery.
Tesla's "solution" to this is also entirely inadequate. You can factory reset the car... as long as it still works. If it gets smashed up or the screen breaks you are screwed.
This is an important issue as cars are only going to get more and more of these features. Some of them are useful, such as the new "sentry" mode that records video while parked so you can see who dinged your door. It's very beta right now and doesn't work well, but people are still very happy that it exists.
Would be fascinating to know if the NSA did actually tell them not to disable it, when Intel wanted to. My money is on simple incompetence though.
Intel doesn't understand security and doesn't even really think about it. They just assume that because they didn't publish the docs it's a secret and no-one will be able to abuse it.
I dunno, it sure does seem like you are the one bringing it up most of the time, along with the "straight white male" trope that's in your signature right now. You seem kinda obsessed.
Do you know what TERF stands or? The "R" is for "radical", as in not part of the mainstream movement.
Of course not all feminists are sex-positive, which is how it should be. It's not a church, it's a body of work and a philosophy that many choose to follow and of course there will be a diverse range of views in it.
That doesn't make your statement any less false though.
It's news because the Freeze Peach Warriors demand you give them a platform. Failure to publish the fruit of their gobs is CENSORSHIP and an affront to humanity.
Just look at poor Notch, de-platformed and down to his last billion dollars. He's only got 3.7 million Twitter followers, and how Microsoft has effectively silenced him. If he had a Patreon account you can bet that would be banned to.
The EU introduced RoHS that limited things like the use of leaded solder in consumer products. People would have moaned about "virtue signalling" but the term hadn't been invented back then.
What actually happened is that the rest of the world basically adopted RoHS since it made more sense to build one product for every market than to make a special one for the EU. The lives of people everywhere were improved because the electronics they were buying had less lead and other hazardous substances in them, even though it was an EU rule. Your welcome.
Same thing will happen again. The demand from the EU market for non-plastic disposable cutlery, containers and packaging will drive cost down and it will end up being used everywhere.
The EU using it's vast market as a force for good is one of the best things about it.
Best thing is to avoid disposable utensils as far as possible.
Japan used to use a hell of a lot of wooden disposable chopsticks. First they started using recycled wood where possible. Now they switched to reusable ones and just wash them.
Facebook requires the advertiser to declare the type of ad, in this case housing, and the type of business. They use that information to set rates. For some reason they don't use that information to limit what targeting options are available.
They say they care and want to stop this happening. They have had years to do something about it. Fuck 'em.
Strawmanning /and/ gaslighting? I've outdone myself.
I find it hard to see how Notch is a victim though. He sold the game to Microsoft, willingly giving up control of it. And with 3.7 million followers and a billion in the bank he doesn't seemed to have suffered much.
"Mild irritation" isn't much of a qualification for victimhood.
Non-replacable batteries should be illegal. Aside from anything else it makes recycling or even safe disposal of e-waste difficult, because lithium batteries are quite dangerous.
I tried TENS but it didn't really help. At this point ibuprofen is the only way I can sleep.
Thanks for sharing. I've had a similar experience with the odd good day. I have to be careful not to go nuts on those days because it will make it all worse later.
By all accounts the AirPods hold up reasonably well, it's just that after 18 months or so the battery is knackered and only lasts a couple of hours.
The EU likes putting stickers on products. For example, when you buy a vacuum cleaner there is a sticker showing how well it cleans on carpet and on hard floors, how much dust it emits from the exhaust, how much energy it uses, and how loud it is. When you get on a plane there is a sticker that shows how efficient it is on an A-G scale.
So why not put a repairability sticker on electronics? iPods get a G rank, high glue content, expected lifetime 18 months before the battery reaches 80% capacity.
This is an exciting line of research. If they can find a way to dull pain permanently it could help a lot of people with chronic pain. It's hard to describe to people who don't have it just had debilitating it can be. Even relatively low levels of pain have a huge effect if they are constant.
Yes, she burns herself quite often while cooking and doesn't notice until the smell of searing flesh reaches her nostrils. In fact she only found out about it when she went for an x-ray and they found she had severe hip problems but hadn't noticed due to lack of pain.
Quite how they didn't realize when she apparently experienced no pain during childbirth is a bit of a mystery.
Maybe you assume everything is recorded all the time, but most people don't. For example, they don't assume that their phones are constantly recording video and making it available to Apple/Google/Samsung because even if that wasn't illegal in many places it would destroy the battery.
Tesla's "solution" to this is also entirely inadequate. You can factory reset the car... as long as it still works. If it gets smashed up or the screen breaks you are screwed.
This is an important issue as cars are only going to get more and more of these features. Some of them are useful, such as the new "sentry" mode that records video while parked so you can see who dinged your door. It's very beta right now and doesn't work well, but people are still very happy that it exists.
Would be fascinating to know if the NSA did actually tell them not to disable it, when Intel wanted to. My money is on simple incompetence though.
Intel doesn't understand security and doesn't even really think about it. They just assume that because they didn't publish the docs it's a secret and no-one will be able to abuse it.
Only if you think opposing racism and sexism is bad... And by the way you say "I presume" it kinda sounds like you do.
I dunno, it sure does seem like you are the one bringing it up most of the time, along with the "straight white male" trope that's in your signature right now. You seem kinda obsessed.
Always bringing Nazis into it...
Do you know what TERF stands or? The "R" is for "radical", as in not part of the mainstream movement.
Of course not all feminists are sex-positive, which is how it should be. It's not a church, it's a body of work and a philosophy that many choose to follow and of course there will be a diverse range of views in it.
That doesn't make your statement any less false though.
Many countries do. The UK has the secretive "Cleanfeed" system, and the list of blocked sites is not published.
Actually there are different kinds of MGTOW, some of whom do have relations with women.
Modern feminism is sex-positive, you are thinking of one radical feminist who didn't actually think men and women should stop having sex, decades ago.
RoHS has exemptions for "critical systems", including aerospace.
It's news because the Freeze Peach Warriors demand you give them a platform. Failure to publish the fruit of their gobs is CENSORSHIP and an affront to humanity.
Just look at poor Notch, de-platformed and down to his last billion dollars. He's only got 3.7 million Twitter followers, and how Microsoft has effectively silenced him. If he had a Patreon account you can bet that would be banned to.
Why focus on CO2? The main issue here is plastic pollution.
Cargo ships create very little plastic pollution compared to disposable drinking straws.
The EU introduced RoHS that limited things like the use of leaded solder in consumer products. People would have moaned about "virtue signalling" but the term hadn't been invented back then.
What actually happened is that the rest of the world basically adopted RoHS since it made more sense to build one product for every market than to make a special one for the EU. The lives of people everywhere were improved because the electronics they were buying had less lead and other hazardous substances in them, even though it was an EU rule. Your welcome.
Same thing will happen again. The demand from the EU market for non-plastic disposable cutlery, containers and packaging will drive cost down and it will end up being used everywhere.
The EU using it's vast market as a force for good is one of the best things about it.
Best thing is to avoid disposable utensils as far as possible.
Japan used to use a hell of a lot of wooden disposable chopsticks. First they started using recycled wood where possible. Now they switched to reusable ones and just wash them.
I've been enjoying proper metal cutlery on economy flights for a decade now.
Facebook requires the advertiser to declare the type of ad, in this case housing, and the type of business. They use that information to set rates. For some reason they don't use that information to limit what targeting options are available.
They say they care and want to stop this happening. They have had years to do something about it. Fuck 'em.
Posted something similar in the firehose. A bit of heating would also help with the camera and is probably the easiest option.
60C isn't a problem, most ARM hardware is at least "industrial" temperature range which is up to 85C.
Seal it up to keep dust and moisture out.
There is probably an off-the-shelf CCTV option for this. They have CCTV in cold countries.
Do local populations usually have to give consent for people to move into the area?