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3 yr. ago

  • You don't believe that the anticompetitive ad stuff Google has been doing for 11 years approached 2.5% of their one year profit?

  • Sadly it doesn't, Google is currently the most profitable company on the planet, with them making 120 billion in pure profit 2024 and estimated to make even more this year, so this fine, for anticompetitive stuff going back to 2014, is less than 2.5% of their one year profit.And there's absolutely zero chance that they gained less than 3 billion from that, so this fine is just part of the cost of doing business.

    That's like the median income family in the US ($84k) getting hit with a ~$1k fine (remember, profit comes after expenses are paid) because they didn't pay their taxes for over a decade, with no requirement of actually paying any of those taxes.

  • Afterwards the giant dish of jollof rice, which also included 168kg of goat meat, was divided into individual portions and distributed to the huge crowds.

  • Without the lens, exactly.

    Realistically, cameras can be put into two categories - they either effortlessly fit in your pocket, or don't, and any that don't tend to get left home unless you intend to specifically go take photos. Doesn't really matter how much bigger it is at that point.And if you have a high end smartphone, you probably can't get a camera that fits in your pocket that would be significantly better.

    As the saying goes, the best camera is the one you have with you.

  • I simply wouldn't. A dumbphone does mostly the things I don't use a phone for.

    And I don't mean fortnite and tickytocks, I've grown up through (most) of the history of mobile phones, I started with my mothers old Nokia 2110 back in like... 1998? I remember how awesome it was to finally have a phone, then to be able to get the bus schedules with the painfully slow WAP connection so I didn't have to call home, then to have navigation, replace the mp3 player, camera, and eventually even mostly my laptop.

    I want to have a datapad with access to all the devices and information in my pocket at all times. If I need it to do something, I know there's an app for it probably. It's awesome.

    I'd really prefer that the datapad wouldn't then leech all of my information in return, though.Oh, and bring back physical keyboards. I'd give my left nut for an HTC Desire Z with 2025 hardware.

  • Pronounced as "gee-yep, we sure decided on dumb name for our company."

  • If you are going for Lineage, you might as well go with some more customized variants like CrDroid or EvolutionX, as long as there is an official build. They are Lineage but with more stuff.

  • For your PETG trials, few things to know: it likes to bond with glass buildsheets permanently, so if you use one, always use a layer of gluestick. Also good in general with PETG, it often has trouble sticking to the buildplate.And it absorbs moisture - though really slowly compared to actually moisture critical materials like nylon or tpu - and prints really stringy when wet, so getting a food dehydrator or a filament dryer is probably a good idea.

    And the "replacement" for ABS is ASA - similar material properties (actually superior UV resistance) while being easier to print.

    Each material has specific strengths and weaknesses, but a good start is to have PLA, PETG, ASA and TPU. That way you can print most of anything reasonable, except living hinges (nylon) or really strong parts (PLA+, and filaments with carbon fibre).

  • I just upgraded from my trusty Pixel 4a to a refurbished Pixel 8, it would have turned 4 years old next week. The battery was completely shot at the end, I got maybe 2½ hours of screentime.I would have been perfectly happy with just swapping the battery and using it for the next four years, this p8 doesn't really do anything new at all, it just does all the same things slightly faster.But I got a good deal on it, so meh.

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  • It's not really that different, the exact temperatures are slightly higher but most intel processors will boost up to 105C, then start throttling to maintain that 105C as a maximum, and if that's not possible they'll halt at 110C.

    AMD does the same, just the temps are (for the one specific CPU I remember them for) 80-85C for starting dialing down the boost, 90C for throttling below the normal freq, and 95C for TjMax which either halts the system or just drops the power usage so low it doesn't matter - I'm not about to take a heatgun to my CPU to see what it does as it wasn't capable of hitting that on its own.

    But it shouldn't be possible to break your CPU from over temperature, no matter what those temps are, because they should be capable of protecting themselves, even if that means dropping to 386 speeds when you are running them in the Death Valley with not cooler whatsoever.

  • ŚĆŻRŹĘĄMŚ

  • "It's not AI, it's just <multiple things that all fall under the category of Artificial Intelligence>".

    AI is a huge field of computer science. It's not the one tiny narrow definition of artificial general intelligence like HAL 9000 or Skynet or Detroit Become Human.

  • Because buying the same super cheap garbage from a local reseller for 5-10x the price instead prevents the fires.

    Seriously, if you want to keep your sanity and feelings of safety and security, don't go researching what the "made in china" things you buy locally every day actually cost to manufacture. Just because someone is asking for a lot of money doesn't mean it's any good.

  • There are plenty of people developing apps that require root, and users who run those are already jumping through a million hoops of cat and mouse to keep their fucking mcdonalds app detecting it so they can get cheaper coffees and free fries.

    Like seriously, wtf McDonalds, your app is like the ultimate root/safetynet/device id detection tool, I don't think there exists even a banking app that is as hard to fool.

  • It is, because it's actually the term that defines the process of transferring files not from an external networked device - downloading - or to an external networked device - uploading - but between two local devices - sideloading.

    It's over two decades old, you downloaded an mp3 from kazaa, and then sideloaded it to your player.

    For android apps, I believe the term originates from the method of using ADB to directly write the app to the phone memory, the command of which is "adb sideload filename"

  • It's a launcher, it can do a heck of a lot of things, and needs permissions to be able to do so.

    But you don't actually have to allow any of them in modern Androids if you don't need those features. Nova Launcher also has quite a list, but I haven't actually enabled any of them, it has never asked to, and everything works fine.

  • We do, but in the last decade youtube has doubled its yearly user count to something like 2.5 billion. That's a lot of more people-hours to spend as well.