

I will never buy a phone directly through a carrier instead of the OEM. They are offering me some nice discounts right now, but I have no interest in a phone where I can’t unlock the bootloader. (Or the carrier lock!)


I will never buy a phone directly through a carrier instead of the OEM. They are offering me some nice discounts right now, but I have no interest in a phone where I can’t unlock the bootloader. (Or the carrier lock!)


Would still need a capacitor or something or it would flicker at 120Hz (in the US) but that’s not much more cost I would hope.
Also those 4 would flicker more than the rest of the string.


These emails were released before the vote on ‘the rest of it’.


I actually had to do that with my phone’s hotspot name because I used to play Pokemon Go on a tablet which was Wi-Fi tethered to the phone. Before I renamed it to opt out, the game would randomly jump me to wherever the network had last been scanned any time the tablet’s GPS got too flaky.


When I saw the headline I was thinking it’s hardly new, being from 2012, but they covered and explained that well. I’m glad progress is accelerating.


If my suggestion works, that won’t matter, it will still be logged in on the new install.


Well, that makes a huge difference to the meaning of the question.
I don’t know, but maybe the login is held in a dotfile such as ~/.dropbox or maybe in ~/.config/dropbox or similar, and just backing up that (not to Dropbox!) would be enough to restore being logged in on a different system.


Oh! I’ve had no real problems with my LG.
The made ice occasionally gets stuck and has to be knocked loose, but that’s no big deal - not like the Samsung freezing the whole mechanism into a huge block that prevents accessing it to clear it out.


I haven’t tried one, but yeah, I assume multiple cameras and either composite or just letting you switch between them.


Yeah, me too. But I’m not good at it.


One thing I heard of that would be handy is cameras in the fridge so while out shopping you can check if you already have stuff or how much is left (depending on the container)


Since it’s a Samsung ice dispenser, that’s a recurring charge: Service calls.
(Seriously though, I’ll never buy another Samsung appliance after my experience with that fridge’s ice dispenser)


Do you really think Meta would ignore the opportunity to both be the default option And have justification to read users’ messages?
Where are the example output pictures?


Sodium itself Is nearly double the density of Lithium. I don’t know how much that affects the whole pack, but it’s gotta be something.


It’s not though. Range is determined by how much battery is in a car, I could build a car with 500km worth of Ni-MH but it would be mostly battery.
Does the same car with 500km worth of lithium batteries have more or less trunk space than 500km of these batteries? I have no idea. I do know the sodium batteries will weigh a bit more, because the article actually gives Wh/kg - and that makes sense since sodium the metal is denser than lithium, but the headline is meaningless.


I really hate how all these headlines give battery capacity as a distance, as though that was a meaningful measure or allowed comparing different technologies.
But in this case it’s first-party, and they still had to make an exception
I think of Yahoo as ‘The search engine that malware sets as default to get paid for referrals or something’.
If you are genuinely asking:
Because documentation should be accurate and comprehensive. LLMs can do neither.