I mean, there are history videos for things that are 1-2 years old too that are there to sum up everything known and explain things to people out of the loop
I mean, there are history videos for things that are 1-2 years old too that are there to sum up everything known and explain things to people out of the loop
That’s the point, DRM would force everyone to use a “compliant” browser (Chrome, or extension-free Firefox etc), and the other browsers might not be able to show content; they may also lock the content from copying and editing without special tools, just like website video DRM works now
But we already see “sorry you’re running adblocker so no content for you” websites, so I’m not sure if that’s gonna change much
Singleplayer on the left, multiplayer on the right
That’s pretty cool, I like watching GT endurance races, but I gueas no invite no play
What’s on Racing4Everyone? Steams/videos of motorsports events? Racing games?
They probably meant that GNU holds half of the Linux desktop usage, and Chrome OS the other
I’m pretty sure it’s either a myth (that it doesn’t work) or some US-centric thing, because when I worked as a delivery guy, I used to go through probably hundreds of different elevators in high-density residential buildings, and most of them have doors that stay open very long to allow baby strollers and heavy appliances to be placed inside, and on pretty much all of these the door closing button works, immediately closing the door
This is what I and many other programmers have done (not the removal, but fake delays), because it improves user experience, actually:
1.When the user clicks a button that should take long in their mind (like uncompressing a zip file etc) but is actually fast, it might seem like something is wrong and it didn’t work
2.When the user transitions between layouts of the application, if it loads everything too fast it will look too abrupt, a fake delay will be made here if a transition animation is not possible/doesn’t fit
It might attract dust and other particles that slightly change the taste though
The source is satire
Used it every day when delivering, because there was much more detail than google maps, so I could actually see where fences and gates are. Used Waze to drive and OSM to walk.
Weird, all the sanitizers I’ve seen have a big ass label that says “non-alcohol” on them, both sprayed and gel-like
Just look at their comments. They full on say it’s a self-hosted platform no matter what, even though most people don’t host it and all of them don’t have to host it.
The original commenter said that “Lemmy is self-hosted”. This is what this comment thread was about. It sure is decentralized, not really self-hosted, even though you can host it youself.
Edit: read another comment wrong
Yeah, just like email. Doesn’t make email a self-hosted service.
Exactly, there’s a difference between self-hosted networks like meshes and mostly privately hosted. It’s like calling all email self-hosted, even though less than 1% of users self-host.
You can say something like “I’ve been here before the Steam Deck” or “I’ve seen the SystemD holy war” or any of the earlier changes around linux you’ve encountered
And it’s dirt cheap
Before the war in Ukraine I had stable 1 Gbit/s for 5$/month with two dedicated IPs
Here in Ireland you get 100 Kbits/s sometimes because they can’t pull you a fiber connection and 4G towers are overloaded to hell, and it costs 20-40€/month