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In the meantime, hackers have just released a new jailbreak and made it a more open platform than ever :^)
In the meantime, hackers have just released a new jailbreak and made it a more open platform than ever :^)
Also no ROCm support afaik, so it’s running completely on CPU
Worry not, for we are insignificant to the universe.
I wonder how long it would take before you would feel it becoming colder
LG and Samsung have been caught uploading screenshots of your HDMI inputs too, so it’s not like it’s any better
I’m not entirely sure what can be effectively done about it.
History offers no control groups; there is no “right” way to proceed. What’s certain is that “nothing” is not the answer.
Yeah ok we get it, they just release the latest checkpoint of their continuously trained model whenever convenient and make big headlines out of it.
“the right side” = the one that makes the most money
Disgusting
I stand corrected, thanks for taking the time to write an informative comment. I haven’t ripped a CD in like 15 years :P
In the end, I found I don’t really care that much, since lossy Bluetooth works well enough for earbuds on the go, and good old cables are still available for more serious listening.
Plus, the truth is that most people can’t tell the difference between lossy and lossless without doing A/B testing, and some can’t tell even with that
Audio CDs contain 44.1kHz 16-bit PCM. If you got FLACs out you transcoded them, and transcoding from lossy to lossless is generally undesirable
EDIT: I stand corrected, I forgot that PCM is not a codec.
Good point, and agreed that thinking in kWh is very intuitive and convenient in some contexts like household appliances, but it’s being used as a more general unit for energy while Joules are just so much better at, well, representing energy and being able to transition from electric to thermal etc.
This version is unsettingly high quality
It is so much worse. Humanfacing
It seems like your whole threat model is avoiding DNS poisoning, which is fine, but I fail to see how you can compare using DoH/DoT to a VPN.
so no one can even read which website you want to visit.
Except for the DNS provider (in your example, Google, so… yikes), the operator of the network you’re on (since the destination IP can be rDNS’d or WHOIS’d, or simply grabbed from the Host header if your browser still tries HTTP first). Any traffic that is not encrypted will be snoopable. Traffic volume and connection times to each destination can be analyzed.
By contrast, a VPN will also use secure (if you trust the provider ofc) DNS servers for your requests, plus making all of the traffic completely opaque except for “going to this server”.
no app, no account, no money required
You can also make your own, free VPN service with a little technical knowledge.
Since Wireguard uses UDP and peers only reply to a received packet if it’s expected and valid, it won’t show up in port scans and barely increases your attack surface. Tailscale and Zerotier are quite nice, but personally I dislike NAT-punching protocols.
Can’t you hide bot accounts from your settings?
Point being…?
It is absolutely not, but I understand it’s easy to lose sense of scale when you go into billions territory.
Behaviour is tracked in order to be influenced.