

That’s illegal! TSLA is not allowed to drop. Prepare for your mandatory stock purchase, citizen.
That’s illegal! TSLA is not allowed to drop. Prepare for your mandatory stock purchase, citizen.
It’s good, but not comparable to Premiere or Resolve. I’d compare it to Vegas maybe.
How is it possible that it draws 100W at idle? What is it even doing?
After using Proton for a couple years I’ve come around to the POV that private email is a dead end. There was not a single occasion where the sender or recipient of any email was also using encryption. If I want encrypted comms I use Signal. Instead of Pass I went back to using Bitwarden.
The combination of AI, crypto wallet and CEO’s pro-MAGA comments (all within six months or so!) are why I quit Proton. They’ve completely lost the plot. I just want a reliable email service and file storage.
Pretty rich coming from Proton, who shoved a LLM into their mail client mere months ago.
JFC, this is terrifying:
The view of young people and TikTok users is particularly frightening at fundamental scientific findings.
For example, only 71 percent of those under 29 years old agree that vaccines have helped save millions of lives. Among TikTok users, the approval is even lower with 69 percent. More than 20 percent of young people, and around a quarter of all TikTok users, even openly doubt this decades-long insight.
Young people and the population as a whole seem to be shockingly agreed on the issue of climate change alone: only 64 percent of respondents and 67 percent of young people agree that climate change is caused by human activities. Among TikTok users, it is only a little more than half.
And the corona pandemic also remains a source of conspiracy theories. A quarter of the total population agrees with the statement that the pandemic was deliberately created by governments or elites in order to be able to control the population more. This dangerous narrative seems to be particularly widespread on TikTok: there, almost 44 percent of users agree with it.
Meloni certainly has a whiff of fascism to her but in a chaotic, haphazard way — sort of a Muskian case-by-case fascism rather than anything coherent.
I know this was a throwaway comment:
a country that still hasn’t managed to shed all the fascism it obtained during the World War II years.
But it shows the author doesn’t know much about Italy, and may be surprised to learn they nearly elected a communist government in the 70s.
Lead gen spam in particular is the bane of my existence for the past year. I get 4-5 per day. If you’re so good at getting qualified leads for others, why are you spamming random recipients for yourself?
I use Arch derivatives for all my computers but my media server runs Ubuntu Server because it’s low maintenance. For storage I use a USB 2x HDD docking station (one of those where you just stick the HDD upright in it).
The acceleration is whack out of the box with any Linux distro I’ve used so if you’re trying to get used to it there then good luck.
Yeah, it was acceptable with the Windows the laptop came with, but it is indeed whack with Linux.
I’m a longtime ThinkPad user and TBH I find the trackpoint pretty annoying to use. It always seems too fast or too slow and it’s very uncomfortable.
That’s true, I was being too reductive with my comment. What you’re describing is the Steve Bannon “flood the zone with shit” strategy.
But when I watch a movie, the “black” that I’m seeing in a particular scene isn’t the absence of light, because it’s not actually “black.” It’s a very very dark shade of grey or brown or whatever. And that requires light.
What you’re seeing are the deactivated TV pixels absorbing light. This doesn’t work with a projector screen because the screen is of course designed to be reflective, otherwise you wouldn’t see anything. Point a projector towards a piece of black velvet and you see… black velvet.
Even if there is some actual “black” (spots where no light is coming out of the projector), there will still be a gradient, and immediately after “no light,” you will have a light attempting to project a very dark shade.
This is the contrast I was referring to earlier. It’s basically the accuracy of the projector in defining a limit between the areas it’s lighting up. But if you do this in a room with the lights on and the windows open, the image will be completely washed out regardless of how high the projector’s contrast is.
Is that true? Because I was under the impression that even the darkest “blacks” from a projector, are still made from the light coming from the device
You’re probably thinking of contrast, which is the ability of the projector to avoid bleeding light into areas that shouldn’t have any. But as far as the darkness of the black levels, that’s down to room treatment (and the screen surface, to a lesser extent). After all, a projector emits light, and darkness is simply the absence of light. You can’t “make” darkness, you can only remove light.
That’s a room treatment issue. You need to control light and reflections, because your “black” is just however dark the projector screen is.
What DDG needs to do is modify the G! switch to include “&udm=14”.
You can do this in Firefox by adding Google (in your list of search engines) like this: google.com/search?udm=14&q=%s
“France rejects backdoor mandate”? Someone enjoyed writing that headline.