I’d call the genre cowboy bebop, but wouldn’t want to insult the show
- 0 Posts
- 21 Comments
betz24@lemmynsfw.comto Technology@lemmy.world•Sam Altman ‘was working on new venture’ before sacking from OpenAIEnglish43·2 years agoCurious why the down votes? I think it’s fair to say this news has been pretty remarkable and has even made it on the news stations. I think a lot of people are probably learning his name right now and makes him seem ‘valuable’ if the board asks him to come back.
betz24@lemmynsfw.comto Technology@lemmy.world•Apple has a memory problem and we're all paying for itEnglish1·2 years agoJust took a look at Framework, it’s a cool concept. I wish the company was older just to see how it forms it’s sea legs. As a mass market item, I can’t imagine the general populace upgrading their own laptop over time, though maybe I’m just old. I didn’t see any computers made from Valve, but I had not thought of them as a hardware company.
But yeah I agree, companies will form their optimization function for profits not people (by design) so people should never put their faith in them. This M1 Air is my first Mac, but I do have to say it is really nice. Excited to see what other companies do to combat it.
betz24@lemmynsfw.comto Technology@lemmy.world•Apple has a memory problem and we're all paying for itEnglish1·2 years agoMy friend, my goal is not to make you upset, just giving my thoughts. Your metaphors don’t exactly make sense in this context, and some of your responses are telescopic focusing on one thing when other companies do equal, nothing or worse. If you could name a company that is exceeding your expectations, I’d love to hear it as I would support them as well.
Regardless, I hope that you have a great day.
betz24@lemmynsfw.comto Technology@lemmy.world•Apple has a memory problem and we're all paying for itEnglish0·2 years agoI don’t work for Apple, so I don’t really know, but I have worked at many electronics companies. A few points:
- Companies lock down or will open source IP (software/firmware/hardware) to meet a particular business strategy. In the mass product market, litigation is common for patent infringement so careful control is taken on each technology. I’m not sure I believe in opensourcing everything. Companies need to stay competitive. Behind a company is ten of thousands of employees that are being paid a livelihood (not just all developers making $250k+/yr, plenty other people in operations, quality, distribution, marketing etc)
- Apple’s strategy is to build a vertically integrated tech stack internally that is aligned with their vision. This is their brand and the people who like the company vision will buy it. You don’t have to like all their choices, but they have done the math and have figured out the proper moving average between pissing off consumers and providing value to know where they stand. They like doing things the Apple way, ensure the company can continue to make money and innovate
- You don’t have to buy the product. Just because you think the price is absurd doesn’t mean others can’t afford it. Personally, in the work I’m doing, my cheaper MacBook Air is having more value to me than my Linux computer I spent 3x more. The OP is designed for a specific type of user, it’s not meant for everyone. For work, I don’t need my computer to be opensource, I need it to work, so I can get my job done. For personal geekiness, I love the opensource nature of linux and have contributed to many projects, however, a company like Apple is definitely needed to make landmark improvements in technology. There is a reason why you go out to an Italian restaurant and get a $26 pasta dish when you can make it at home for $4.
- In your thought process, hardware is hardware. But there is also a mission that is attached with it. Apple leads in terms of mitigation of environmental impact which I think is pretty cool. It offers buybacks for most (all ?) products. I don’t know how much they actually recycle per part or if things are just getting shipped off to Zambia and being sold as refurbished. If I’m paying a little more to benefit a company that aligns with my values than so be it. They aren’t going to sell a product for a loss (unless strategically). There are too many retirement funds in Apple for it to be losing money
betz24@lemmynsfw.comto Technology@lemmy.world•Apple has a memory problem and we're all paying for itEnglish33·2 years agoNot sure why this user is getting down voted. They made valid points. I have been using Linux as a personal computer since the I was old enough to type, however, my job uses M1 macs. I can definitely say MacOS in terms of UX is a pain (especially without making some third party updates), but I cannot talk shit about the hardware performance.
I initially grimaced when I received a 16GB RAM M1 computer from IT, however, the battery life along with the compute power has not failed me. I run 3D CAD, write software, and design simulation models and have been honestly amazed compared to my 64GB RAM + Nvidia GPU Linux computer.
Everyone talks about Mac fanboys, but I think the anti-Mac fanboys are just as bad. Seem to automatically hate Apple stuff without even using it. If you take a look at what is going on (outside of Apple) with supercomputing and high speed serial links, you would understand why Apple is doing what it is.
betz24@lemmynsfw.comto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•How do poor people in the states give birth without money?English201·2 years agoWhen he leaves California, he will leave his salary too (and possibly his industry too)
betz24@lemmynsfw.comto Technology@lemmy.world•Pfizer says it will price Covid treatment Paxlovid at nearly $1,400 for a five-day course, which researchers estimate only costs Pfizer $13 to produce. That's a 10,000%+ markup. Shameful.English156·2 years agoIsn’t Pfizer going to offer Paxlovid free of charge till 2028 if your uninsured or underinsured?
Who would be the people affected by this?
No love for ichiuryu?
betz24@lemmynsfw.comto Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•the Dragonball-Z powerup scream is just the "boy" version of the magical girl transformation sequenceEnglish1·2 years agodeleted by creator
Thank goodness
betz24@lemmynsfw.comto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•I’m about to throw my entire Pihole out the windowEnglish4·2 years agoI haven't done any research on pi-hole (I use firewalla) but is a raspberry Pi even powerful enough to support a small home network?
What kind of CPU/RAM usage for a your unit normally have?
betz24@lemmynsfw.comto Piracy: ꜱᴀɪʟ ᴛʜᴇ ʜɪɢʜ ꜱᴇᴀꜱ@lemmy.dbzer0.com•I’m sorry, but I cannot help you with finding pirated movies. Piracy is illegal and unethical 😉English27·2 years agoHow does piracy help creators?
betz24@lemmynsfw.comto Technology@lemmy.world•Linux gives up on 6-year LTS kernels, says they’re too much workEnglish74·2 years agoWhile I agree, Linus isn’t getting younger and as we are seeing, long time lead maintainers are starting to step down. It would be a shame if Linux kernel and subsequently it’s OS’s, turns into what happened to Android. We see it happening time and time again (e.g. Reddit, Twitter), when there is the possibility for more revenue, these companies will kill anything that was developed 'for the people ’
betz24@lemmynsfw.comto Technology@lemmy.world•Linux gives up on 6-year LTS kernels, says they’re too much workEnglish710·2 years agoBig tech chipping in is how we get Amazon spyware/Microsoft apps built into OS. I agree with respectable salary for developers. I think if Linux org ran the same campaign as Wikipedia it would gather a lot more donations. The whole world runs on some form of the Linux kernel.
betz24@lemmynsfw.comto Games@sh.itjust.works•Creators of Slay the Spire will migrate their next game to a new engine if Unity doesn't completely revert their changesEnglish2·2 years agoRetroactively charging developers, that’s stupid.
However, I’m not knowledgeable on any Game Industry economics, but isn’t $0.20 on a $20-$60 game negligible? I understand some people will have multiple devices so the developer could be out $1. On a $20 game that someone sells 1000 copies, that’s only $200 of $20,000 sales (maybe $800 in fees at the high end). I’ve used Unity before and it’s still a pretty solid game engine with easy to use tooling; using it would definitely save you time to build your game (time=money). Additionally, if I were to be building a game studio, everyone knows unity, so it would be easy to hire or find contractors who can help with pieces of the game. It makes sense from a business standpoint for me unless I’m missing something.
Is there a max fee? On the opposite side of the spectrum I could see DDOS-like attacks on game developers where an attacker can spin up a bunch of virtual machines and then keep installing the game to charge the developer $1mil dollars.
Mastodon has went through a similar bump, but more recently has had some larger figures begin usage (local government broadcasts, b-level ‘thought-leaders’/‘influencers’, etc). In order to get to the next level, lemmy needs to show it can survive test of time and is worth the effort to establish an online profile. For example, reddit has corporate organizations creating and maintaining subreddits which act as an avenue for community engagement. Having active community engagement leads to advertisement, which can be a double edged sword, but useful if pursuing ‘growth’ metrics. I’m not sure what the lemmy devs (or it’s users) have planned for this.
betz24@lemmynsfw.comto World News@lemmy.world•Foreign student arrested in Norway on suspicion of espionage including electronic eavesdroppingEnglish6·2 years agoLol oh jeez. Do you have a source? The original article didn’t mention anything and a bunch of other news sources are just copy-paste the same information.
betz24@lemmynsfw.comto World News@lemmy.world•Foreign student arrested in Norway on suspicion of espionage including electronic eavesdroppingEnglish16·2 years agoI wonder what tipped authorities off that there was some form of spectrum surveillance. AFAIK you don’t need a license or government approval to receive RF spectral data in almost all countries. I wonder if the actor was also transmitting as well.
I understand something like a GMC Suburban or a Cadillac Escalade, but the Porsche Macan (in article thumbnail) and many other compact SUVs take up the same curb space and about the same weight and length as a standard sedan.
vs
Unless they put weighted meters at every parking space, would be interesting to see how they enforce this. Compact-SUVs are useful and are well equipped for their weight (AWD, safety features, space-efficient).
Here is a cool chart showing weight vs road wear. Not sure how scientific it is, but shows cars around 4000lbs are considered normal wear.
Unless the goal is to move drivers to the subcompact-sedan form factor.
Then they could make low cost parking spaces ~170" long and any cars that do not fit in that would have to go in the bigger spaces with a higher rate. Very curious how they would implement it without costing the tax payer too much.