Or, you know, just ping your landlords router.
Or, you know, just ping your landlords router.
Well, the link is to The London Economic, so what govt do you think it is?
It wasn’t published September 29th, it was updated then.
It was published back in March. All these pages are on github where this can be verified: https://github.com/MicrosoftDocs/linux/commits/main/docs/install.md
I hope that is an unfortunate typo in the title…
Yeah, no.
DDOS attacks cost very little, and most people could easily afford to buy access to a network for ddosing a site like Lemmy.world.
We regularly have to deal with students who have bought DDOS attacks because they want to try to get exams cancelled and such.
You got that one wrong.
vscode is open source and released under a MIT license. Then the binaries they build have telemetry and such and is released under another license that is less FOSS friendly.
VS Codium is based on that vscode source code from Microsoft, and i pretty much the same thing, but without the telemetry and such.
Vs code is open source btw.
Or use rufus to create the USB installer, and it will ask if you want to create a local account, and some other things to make installation even easier than it already is.
Which is still chromium, just removed any dependencies on google.
Google makes Chromium, and enev “ungoogled-chromium” will register as chromium in statistics.
That is what this thread of comments started with…
Yes, it is still chromium.
In statistics, Brave counts as chromium.
Probably because they have released in the major central european countries: https://knowledgebase.frame.work/what-countries-and-regions-do-you-ship-to-r1899ikiO
I did, when I realised it would take a while and started looking elsewhere.
But since they officialy do not condone it, and have some language in their TOS and warranty, i didn’t bother with it, since while anything they might do against it in regards to warranty wouldn’t hold up in a legal sense, i didn’t want to be the one to test that if it should happen.
Northern Europe.
Last i checked (a couple of months back), they were finaly working on keyboard layouts for the area, but still no info on when te laptops would be available around here.
You are blocking NTP though. Look at your image, all the way at the bottom.
That is great! When the fuck can i buy one?
Been two years now since i first heard about Framework from the first LTT video on it (just checked at that video actualy came out in july 2021), and i was allready looking at replacing my laptop, so i thought Framework would be great to get.
Now two years have passed, and they still aren’t available in my region. Couldn’t realy delay the replacement any more, so now i have ended up getting a different laptop, meaning even i Framework became available here soon, i won’t buy a new laptop for 5-6 years at least.
Youtube added shorts to subscription, and i added Youtube-shorts block to firefox.
The same argument can be made that digital allows for a multiplying of films being made at shorter run times
That ignores the creative side of movie making though. Yes, they could make more short movies, but they need a story and script to make the movies from, and that is something that hasn’t become any faster to create with time.
If you are going to make more movies, then you need more people on that process. People who might not be as good at it. You would then quickly end up with a lot more “direct to video” quality movies.
Bloat is a problem that a lot of stories have because their creators can’t recognize what needs to be in there and what’s just filler. Sure, there are moments and genres that rely on lingering, but in general more isn’t better, it’s just more.
Oh yeah, there are definitly makers that abuse it to make longer movies that don’t need to be long. Just a bunch of filler that doesn’t realy add to the story. I can’t mention any on the top of my head, but i know i have seen movies where that was a thought i had.
It makes sense that they are getting longer doesn’t it?
It has gotten easier to film more, with digital storage of the film. It has gotten easier to edit. It has gotten easier to transport bigger films around the world.
So with it becoming easier to make longer movies, why wouldn’t the makers use that to do more story telling in their movies?
Should maybe the movies then take in to account that people watching the movies might want a break, and make the movies with an intermission intended? sure.
“literary”, not “literally”. As in literature.
The article is about the books we export, not the oil.