anonymity enables greater levels of toxicity
No. No, it doesn't. Various fora that have required real names and IDs over the years have proven this—people are quite willing to be extremely toxic even if their real names are attached to every post.
anonymity enables greater levels of toxicity
No. No, it doesn't. Various fora that have required real names and IDs over the years have proven this—people are quite willing to be extremely toxic even if their real names are attached to every post.
Feeding machines to get a pat on the head from the bosses is seriously fucked.
If the tokens are the company's property and not yours, I guess it's no different from paying for things with play money. (Or maybe the fake money they burn for the dead in China would be a better analogy.)
Pretty sure they've been doing fine without the US market for years.
(It's going to be interesting to see what happens when BYD sets up dealerships just north of the border, since Canada has given them the okay to import a certain number of vehicles per year.)
Inertia. Mental inertia, that is.
Point is, people are using the wrong tools to look for stuff. So it's a social problem more than a technical one. Those are always the most difficult type to solve.
Hmm. Using the search term "small website discoverability crisis" . . .
On duckduckgo: original website is the third result (after what looks like a SEO firm's longform ad and ycombinator) without quotes and the first result with.
On startpage: original is the first result even without quotes
On mojeek: original is the first result even without quotes
I do not have accounts with any of these search engines and do not allow them to run Javascript or set cookies, although it's possible that duckduckgo may have noticed that someone with my ip often makes highly specific searches and looks at the long-tail results.
My conclusion from that, combined with other people's searches surfacing large sites first, is that the results you receive can be significantly distorted by the search engine's algorithm. Google in particular is likely trying to direct traffic to its advertising customers and should be avoided for that reason.
Lithium is pretty much the best possible chemical to build batteries out of.
Depends on how you define "best". Likely the highest possible short-term energy density, yes, but that isn't the only thing we might want out of a battery. "Doesn't catch fire" is one of the areas where the highest-energy lithium battery chemistries are far from the best, for instance.
Since I'm sure it has no authority, why would anyone want to talk to it? About the only reason anyone ever approaches their boss is to get said boss to do something. (That can be something as nebulous as "put more faith in what I say in the future than what this other guy says," but there always is something.)
Or do a little more research and find somewhere that the infrastructure was so trashed by war or natural disaster that some records are completely gone. Happened a lot in WWII, and it must have happened in other places since.
If you use Windows, you agreed to the TOS.
If your employer is forcing it on you, chances are you never even saw the TOS.
Depends on what you're doing. If you're okay with very limited Web use, even 2GB is viable (or was about a year ago when I retired that machine). More normal levels of Web use, you're going to need more RAM. Not sure about GPU-constrained loads like 3D modeling, as I never tried them on that machine. But other than those and some games, nothing on Linux should require even 8GB. Server systems can make do with even less.
For what it's worth, I have a system with first-gen Zen cores (Threadripper 1900X). 8 cores at 3.8GHz. Not too shabby even now. It's just got a higher power draw than the newer chips. Got a fairly decent price on it on Black Friday of 2017. (Never ran Windows on it, though.)