Since iPhone Air is thinner, it needs to use titanium for the increased rigidity to avoid another iPhone 6-eqsue 'bendgate' at the risk of worse heat dissipation
I now see that my misunderstanding was about who exactly the users were and who the provider was. My opinion of provider was only GCE, AWS, etc. while the commenter I believe when talking about providers included users of those services (who again were providers of serverless services).
I don't understand what exactly you're saying. All of those services have serverless services, but they also have server based instances which abstract compute to amount of cores and RAM rather than CPU cycles. And most use is out of the services which aren't serverless.
>It's, however, really bad if you sell CPU cycles for a living.
Who really sells CPU cycles? Cloud providers sell instances priced per core. So the real hit is by the customers since they have to shell out for more instances for the same amount of computing power.
The hit I see is by providers of 'serverless' computing, since they charge per request and have their margins reduced.
Well this isn't true for codecs anymore. mpv and many other players support many codecs out of the box. The reason VLC has become slow it they keep on adding features.
The whole application can pass off as professional video playing software. So many ways to play and so many places to play from that it surprises me everytime I open it (which is very rarely).
It also comes with a whole suite of software that you don't have to find EU alternatives for like Calendar, Drive, Password manager, etc