
Can’t wait for the first “AI did it” court case and/or shareholder meeting.
Can’t wait for the first “AI did it” court case and/or shareholder meeting.
Let’s pretend for a second that the TSA is not a circus meant to appease people that are not paying too much attention being performed by an organisation that’s effectively an employer of last resort.
The TSA will not even stop people from taking what they would need to make a Molotov cocktail with what they can buy in the airport shop. Their stated goal is not to reduce the risk of incidents to 0 is reducing it to reasonable level with the least disruption to the air travelers as possible - otherwise they would be trying to get people to fly naked and without luggage.
You are seriously misunderstanding TSA’s purpose.
And the issue with wireless communications in airplanes was never that it was a huge risk by itself, it was always that there’s a small chance that it could increase noise enough that some important communication might potentially be missed or misinterpreted. And there are lots of things that factor in the risk, like power, bands, and the amount of people not following the rules - it’s very different to have one person forgetting to shut off the cellular signal on the phone or to have 200 phones on full blast mode trying to reach the nearest antenna.
All airplanes I’ve been in the last decade explicitly allow Bluetooth - and it’s very easy for the staff to see the dozens of people wearing wireless head/earphones. For WiFi it’s usually tied to the existence of on-board Internet.
You half answered your question. Different band and very different levels of signal strength.
And there are airplanes that allow wifi, just not all of them yet.
Not if they think they have enough of a cult following to pull an Apple.
To be fair, brands sabotage their own phones to try to force people to buy a new one every year. 1000 euros would be fine if the phone lasted the better part of a decade, but between lagging or non existent software updates, broken updates, and no affordable reparability, 1000 doesn’t buy you a phone it pays for an expensive rental.
Inflation doesn’t mean everything increases prices uniformly. Desktop PCs, for example, were more expensive in absolute value in the 1980s, and the average desktop would cost more than $4000 if they had kept with inflation.
Fine is high praise for videogame adaptations.
They published lots of popular franchises, the problem is that they never owned half of them and the other half are now owned by big labels like EA. Maybe they can recover some mid level franchises from the ruins Embracer is leaving behind but that’s pretty much it.
There’s Wipeout VR for the PS VR. It’s not that bad for short sessions.
I wouldn’t call JSON numeric representation unambiguous. In spec yes, but lots of implementations refused to limit themselves to JavaScript’s idiotic number handling.
You can consent to a federation interface without consenting to having a bot crawl all your endpoints.
Just because something is available on the internet it doesn’t mean all uses are legitimate - this is effectively the same problem as AI training with stolen content.
It’s not about the impact it’s about consent.
Do you think Flohmarkt is worse than Volkswagen?
That’s not an issue for brands. German and Chinese brands are just doing fine everywhere with the possible exception of the two countries in the world where people are not exposed to other languages.
And why should we name things for the exclusive convenience of monolingual English speakers to the detriment of everyone else?
Got it, let’s name it in mandarin then
At least most speakers of European languages will pronounce it close enough to German - though most will not do make the r in markt as hard as Germans do.
I think it’s Samurai Bringer.