

SLASH THE GAME CHANGING BREAKTHROUGH
SLASH THE GAME CHANGING BREAKTHROUGH
What’s dystopian is that a company like google will fight tooth and nail to remain the sole owner and rights holder to such a tech. A technology that should be made accessible outside the confines of capitalist motives.
Such technologies have the potential to lift entire populations out of poverty. Not to mention that they could mitigate global warming considerably.
It is simply not in the interest of humanity to allow one or more companies to hold a monopoly over such technology
And they’re going to include health/medical data storage using FHIR
https://www.androidpolice.com/health-connect-medical-records-android-16/
https://developer.android.com/health-and-fitness/guides/medical-records
Although I’ll admit that I just skimmed the article, it seems like the author is simply stating and illustrating his opinion without supporting it with any data or stats. Bayesian stats are easier than frequentist stats? For what kind of data? In what kind of research setting? In what kind of discipline? For what kind of student?
As in, a google docs alternative for document collaborating?
WHAT’S YOUR FAVOURITE LINUX DISTRO
I wish I knew then that debbie does the trick for me
First thing that comes to mind is RISCV. Although it’s not new, it is gaining traction in consumer computing
Obligatory mention that IQ is a terrible metric:
“[…] rewards higher than $10 produced [increases] equivalent to more than 20 IQ points, whereas rewards of less than $1 were only one-tenth as effective.”
https://www.science.org/content/article/what-does-iq-really-measure
THE YEAR
What sets opensuse apart from distros like debbie?
Ah I was wondering. Then I found that plugin swhich got me confused whether op was joking or not
I can’t tell the difference between these two things but I do have a preference for one of them
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Man I totally agree. I have an XZ2C running lineage but it isn’t working correctly. Am going to try to flash it again, hopefully that helps.
At any rate, I haven’t come across a satisfying explanation about the reason for the absence of small smartphones. I’m convinced that there is a market for it so why aren’t any of the established companies producing them?
Is it a matter of profit? I.e. are the profit margins better for larger devices?
I don’t expect it to be a battery capacity problem, since the trade off seems sensible to make.
Wouldn’t a vpn solve this?
I don’t get the diverging diamond interchanges one
GTK is mainly developed by Gnome
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/GTK
More compact phones please!