Ooh, good Ole malicious compliance.
Make it a check.
Even better, pay with visa. The processing fee will be more than 23¢
Ooh, good Ole malicious compliance.
Make it a check.
Even better, pay with visa. The processing fee will be more than 23¢
That was an extra, I wouldn’t worry about it.
So I know whether to waste my time
“Devitio”
I expect no less from AI garbage, haha
“raw dogging the Internet”… I chuckled out loud
One day, after I am done with -insert reason here-, I will have a bad ass, well thought out backup solution.
For some reason you’re “insert reason here” was dropped by lemmy. I guess a sequential less-than/greater-than messes with it.
Right?
$450 and a toaster to use something like the external batteries I’ve used for a decade.
Nope.
Just watched them all a few weeks ago, still very funny, see nothing wrong with any of it. The movies are all about absurdity.
Have you seen the books?
I know someone in a place like this, and to move there they essentially sell any property they have to buy their space in the facility.
It’s not cheap, but these places also provide on-site medical facilities with trained staff so someone 65 having a stroke has a decent chance of being OK.
62 is first year of social security eligibility.
Giving him shit about it
Are you one of my siblings?
So you have nothing to hide, eh?
These tvs, like smartphones, track lots of stuff. And the databases they feed make all sorts of inferences.
They even scan what you’re watching from other sources and can determine what show it is, and report that info too.
They know when you’re home and leave, to some extent.
I’ve read of patents for wifi tech in tvs that will connect to other TVs of the same brand for a connection if you don’t set one up.
They definitely use their own DNS, and probably have some hard coded IPs so you can’t block them phoning home via DNS (I’ve tested this myself). I can see this traffic even when I setup DNS blocks - they still hit the vendor’s service IPs (looking at you, Samsung).
These companies are openly antagonistic and adversarial to us, and you “have nothing to hide”?
Another hero we didn’t know we needed.
Have my grateful uovote.
Though odds are highest for carbon-based, simple from it’s abundance.
Thanks for this - a reasoned, easy-to-grasp explanation of missions, without a lot of technical jargon.
It’s this kind of writing that’s needed (from any technical field) for those not in that field to understand it. I’m in IT, and work diligently to provide this kind of explanation to decision-makers. It’s not easy, when in your head you see all the “but this” at the technical level. We have to sacrifice high-resolution detail to provide a “good enough” image for people to comprehend. Sometimes that means being “technically inaccurate” - which then gets unnecessarily criticised.
I wish magazines like Scientific American (which has seriously gone down hill) wrote like this more.
Water
Wait, no, electricity to run my fridge, convection oven and stove. 😁
Wow, I never made that connection
And we already do this - every culture has a form, some more ingrained than others.
During WWII (and the Cold War), Allied analysts, spies and diplomats found learning Russian particularly difficult for just this reason.
Are the links you added from the article or some others you found?
I’ve worked for very large organizations (30k+ employees) that didn’t use crappy paper.
All depends on the company.