Pretty much the hardware version of && false
Pretty much the hardware version of && false
it happened again with the Intuitive Machines lander that landed on the moon last week
The Github UX is amazing if you ever had to use gitlab or bitbucket
I like using AntennaPod for podcasts and Spotify for music.
Nobody knows if and when programming will be automated in a meaningful way. But once we have the tech to do it, we can automate pretty much all work. So I think this will not be a problem for programmers until it’s a problem for everyone.
When the Apple car is released, the EU will invent 350 kW DC fast charging via USB-C 🙏
It works as long as you don’t call list()
within that function.
Haha, I completely missed that it’s a game.
I wonder how often someone walks in and tells them about the mistake. Do the baristas have a standard response?
I can’t tell what the quality is because there is no brand name and they don’t make any claims about the source of bricks. It’s definitely not Lego, so not coming from a Lego factory.
If you don’t want it new, you can get used sets at places like Ebay.
If you don’t need the instructions (Lego lets you download PDFs on their website), you can order individual parts from pages like Bricklink or Brickowl. This is quite involved and can be confusing if you haven’t done it before. You need to find a seller (or multiple ones) who have all the parts you need at the correct quantities and colors and who will ship it to your region.
You can buy parts from compatible brands. I’ve used Webrick before, it works just like Brickowl, but can be cheaper for parts that are rare in the Lego world.
You can also look for sets from compatible brands, like this one. Sometimes they are copies of Lego sets (which I find questionable), sometimes they are unique designs. The quality of those can be hit and miss.
Alternatively, do retired sets come back into circulation again?
Usually not, but sometimes it happens, like with the 2017 Saturn V (21309) and the 2021 Saturn V (92176).
I agree with your point on biodiversity and yes, climate change poses an existential threat to individual people, but not to civilization as a whole.
No, I’m certain that human civilization would survive.
I don’t think this kind of catastrophizing helps. Climate change certainly doesn’t “threaten the fundamental existence of organized human society”. Sure, we should do more about it and future generations would be better off if we were to lessen the impact, but it is not an existential threat.
It doesn’t make sense for Lemmy (or Mastodon) to send your IP to other instances. Without that IP, all they have is your username. They can’t really track you based on just the username.
What a wild conspiracy theory.
Legally, they can’t collect and process any of the data unless you accepted a contract with them. Just by sending an upvote or a comment to their instance, you don’t agree to any of this.
And if they choose to ignore the law and just do it anyway, they still can’t, because all they have is the data that your instance sends them. They don’t have your geo-location, device Id, etc.
Interesting. It seems that Lemmy can see Mastodon users and send private messages to them. And I believe Mastodon users can create Lemmy posts, so potentially Threads users could do that too once Meta enables two-way communication.
I’m in favor of federation. The point of federated networks isn’t that there are no evil corporations, but rather that they can’t cause damage.
What Facebook can do:
What they can’t do:
I think this is mostly relevant for Mastodon servers due to the format of the content, but the arguments are the same.
You can simply not follow people on Threads and you will have no Threads content in your feed
The political ideas you can find on Reddit are much more diverse. There is usually at least some pushback against some of the most deranged statements.