What a stark example of Mao’s legacy (look at the dip between ages 60 and 65).
What a stark example of Mao’s legacy (look at the dip between ages 60 and 65).
We need this in the EU too. Actually, every country should adopt this policy.
I think I read in a gaming magazine in the late 90s that in Germany games are censored so that blood spilling from enemies is coloured green or in some cases the enemies are robots that spill black oil.
Actually they are just for looking like a big rock star that can afford to throw away a fistful of picks every night.
You just made these things obsolete.
I don’t care if they pull the plug on Twitter. My point was that if the EU bans one website, it sets a precedent for the future where it’s easier to do it again. The rules that could lead to Twitter being banned today might be sane but who knows about the future? Maybe they start blanket banning Lemmy or Mastodon instances if the fediverse grows so large that moderation can’t keep up?
We don’t need a precedent for the EU censoring the internet.
Does it even matter which party is in power when it comes to this? It’s in America’s geopolitical interest to have a strong Israel to counter the neighboring Arab States, especially Iran. The fate of Palestine is almost a non-issue in that context.
They run 8. gen Intel processors. The difference to latest models is substantial.
You can run Office programs in the browser, so if possible I would install Linux. Windows is so heavy and the T480 is quite old hardware by now. I have Pop OS on a T480s and it’s reasonably fast for coding and web browsing.
Drive
Song is Kavinsky - Nightcall
It’s not unreasonable to start charging for an app like that if it is under active maintenance, that costs money for the company after all.
But the lesson for the consumer is: Don’t buy tools that rely on apps or servers ran by someone else unless you want to eventually start paying rent…
There is speedtest-cli at least that you can run from a script.
Why does that portal need to exist in the first place?
Nethack is under 5MB, runs on 80s hardware and you can play it forever.
What’s the benefit of it versus emulation?
As any rational player will do.
Heck, even electronic voting systems in the US is closed-source.
How can elections even be trusted to be fair in that case?
Woah, in 2021 their best paid developer got 775K. I wonder how much work he produced for that money.
I’m confused how that works. The article says the panels are connected to an inverter that plugs into a wall outlet. Does that mean the inverter has a male plug with 230V at the prongs and by connecting that to the wall it connects in parallel to the apartment’s electricity circuit?