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I don’t know about other countries, but Apple itself reports that it provided access to customer accounts at the US government’s request 90% of the time
I don’t know about other countries, but Apple itself reports that it provided access to customer accounts at the US government’s request 90% of the time
In the default configuration of iDevices, the US already can
This seems more around the UK wanting to spy on its own citizens more easily
I constantly see people talking about playing things like Balatro on their deck that certainly doesn’t need more than 30fps.
Seems super useful for games like that on a flight
Hardware. There’s a load value predictor that guesses the value of a load from memory
Matrix as a protocol, and the official client is Element.
I’m baffled Signal didn’t support transferring chats… I thought it was supposed to be easier than Matrix
It’s magnetically attached and can be used wirelessly, so the thumbnail is showing off that feature
Maybe that’s an Android thing?
My wife uses douyin on an American SIM all the time. She had to get someone from the mainland to type a pin for her when she first installed it, but there wasn’t any hardware based attestation on iOS
It also says
ChatGPT responded with information already publicly available on the internet and provided warnings against harmful or illegal activities.
So without the article comparing the search terms to what the person would have found typing into google, it’s quite pointless to hand wring about AI
Transfer speed isn’t part of this regulation, but yeah, making it clearer on the box the max power output on chargers and cables would be a good continuation of the requirements
I agree, but at least requiring USB PD, as it’s written, will at least give you 240 watt USB-C charging if they offer higher than 240 watt charging through a proprietary standard
Manufacturers are allowed to add supplementary charging standards on top of USB-C PD, and the commission is required to review the landscape every 5 years to see if a new technology is better than USB-C that should be adopted in the future
Jobs was specifically against the App Store when the first gen came out
It was added as an update to the first gen after the 3g came out
The iPhone 3g would be the first modern “smartphone” from Apple; before that it didn’t allow adding more applications, same as the “dumb phones” before it. It just had a capacitive touchscreen and a better web browser
Even then, the batteries weren’t glued in and it was significantly easier to replace
Not to be too conspiratorial, but isn’t that a pretty good indicator that Meta capitulated and put a backdoor in WhatsApp for them?
We only get 200 GiB for that price in the USA - I was surprised they offer so much more over there
Wait - you can get 1tb for £2 there?
I wouldn’t mind as much if it was that price.
It stems from companies being too cheap to get people work phones, but still wanting them to be available
We were taught about OpenMP in like 2012 https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenMP
Intel’s TBB was also used some, but not as frequently https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Threading_Building_Blocks
For what it’s worth, it seems like it’s this “journalist” trying to make a sensational headline
The researchers themselves very clearly just tried to see if it could happen in our reality
“We decided to look at the probability of a given string of letters being typed by a finite number of monkeys within a finite time period consistent with estimates for the lifespan of our universe,”
Sure, but if that’s your only concern, then you aren’t really concerned that the toggle is removed in the UK, either
The report is that Apple is removing the user’s ability to disable Apple’s back door, and you asked for evidence that they roll over for law enforcement
If you want governments to have access to a backdoor to what Apple touts as “Privacy,” your initial question doesn’t make much sense