He places the blame on “laws” when it is really capitalism. People want a single family home so capitalism provides it the absolutely cheapest way possible: cookie cutter suburbs.
It’s no different than Campbell’s soup. It’s not meant to be the best soup. It’s meant to be the soup you can afford to buy.
I think it’s a delayed development reaction to Amazon Alexa from 4 years ago. Alexa came out, voice assistants were everywhere. Someone wanted to cash in on the hype but consumer product development takes a really long time.
So product is finally finished (mobile Alexa) and they label it AI to hype it as well as make it work without the hard work of parsing wikipedia for good answers.
They’re crazy but I don’t have a big problem with it.
Corporate Accounting: For FY 2025 we will continue to maintain NY office for the $1.3 million tax benefits then close the office in 2026 when those benefits end and shift profits to Bermuda.
If corporations can get all the benefits of society and change countries whenever it benefits them, why not private citizens?
It isn’t hard but it is tedious because each of the ad settings is in a different location. Like taskbar has its settings which aren’t configured in the Settings app where you can turn off the ads. Settings has places in search and another in privacy. Look at the OP image. It’s 9 different settings that need to be found and turned off.
I did and couldn’t find anything about it being a scam.
Merchants after converting could decide how to round their prices. They chose to round up because it was an easy excuse to raise prices. That’s not a scam. That’s business being business.
Small metal object with clip on top. Clip spins around the object body and can be attracted to a magnet (so made of steel probably). Object body does not react to magnet (so made of brass maybe). Cone shaped tip seems to be made of some kind of plastic....
Not all Foghorn Leghorn cartoons feature the chicken hawk. Sometimes it is Barnyard Dawg, sometimes it’s Miss Prissy, and sometimes it’s Usagi Tsukino.
Corporations aren’t your friend. I like what AMD is doing right now so I’ll buy them.
But there are situations like media servers where Intel is a better choice because its integrated GPU that can do video encoding/decoding at a much higher speed and lower watts than AMD.
While there is no doubt that the Nixon shock and gold standard had huge effects in 1971, that website pushes a goldbug agenda that isn’t supported by other sources.
For example the labor productivity gap didn’t start until after 1979. Which is no surprise given that 1980 was the start of Reagan pushing his trickle down economics.
Which doesn’t matter because he’s already given everything to the community. If they want to take it in another direction, he’s already given it to them.
The comics are a complete tease. The first 1 or 2 are a rehash of the final TV episode. Then it starts a new story without providing any conclusion to the series. The new storyline doesn’t even have a conclusion.
??? You don’t need a specific room. Quest doesn’t need any beacons or wires.
I don’t like Facebook, never had a Facebook account and refused to buy their VR until they removed the Facebook account requirement 2 years ago.
But the hardware is excellent for the price. Facebook is selling the hardware at a loss and making it up in software sales. So you are hurting Facebook by buying their hardware and using it with Steam.
SteamVR is a software store. It has nothing to do with whether the hardware needs beacons in the room or wires.
You can play SteamVR racing sims at your desk. If it’s a standing game, you push a button and then draw virtual borders on the floor wherever you are to define the play space.
Why American Suburbs are so Creepy (liminal spaces) (www.youtube.com)
Found this great deal on a new chair for my living room. Almost 50% off! (lemmy.world)
Rabbit R1 AI box revealed to just be an Android app (arstechnica.com)
Rabbit R1 AI box is actually an Android app in a limited $200 box, running on AOSP without Google Play....
She wants to become a sovcit but also still draw benefits from the government. (lemmy.world)
Look what they need to mimic a fraction of our unshittified experience (sh.itjust.works)
Source...
Our reasoning is different, but their heart is in the right place (files.catbox.moe)
checkmate, big geology!! (mander.xyz)
Anon can’t have a factual argument (sh.itjust.works)
Don't "JUMP.. TO CONCLUSIONS!!" when this guy shows up! (lemmy.world)
De-dollarisation gains traction among Brics (www.khaleejtimes.com)
I guess she's only seen the original 4:3 version (files.catbox.moe)
Very small valve part? (lemmy.world)
Small metal object with clip on top. Clip spins around the object body and can be attracted to a magnet (so made of steel probably). Object body does not react to magnet (so made of brass maybe). Cone shaped tip seems to be made of some kind of plastic....
Foghorn knows Sailors, and you are no Sailor (lemmy.world)
I've used Intel CPUs for years, but I'm going back to AMD | Digital Trends (www.digitaltrends.com)
WTF Happened In 1971? (wtfhappenedin1971.com)
(kinda) A great website to share if you have no idea how to explain the downfall of the US economy....
Much ado about "nothing" - Xe Iaso (==Goodbye NixOS) (xeiaso.net)
discourse.nixos.org/t/…/44236...
Are they any good? (files.catbox.moe)
Meta spent $4.3 billion on its VR division in three months, and made *checks figures* $440 million in return (www.pcgamer.com)