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bux93

1,094 karmajoined 5 lat temu

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Font of 'wasteful' diversity: State Department orders return to Times New Roman

theguardian.com
2 points·by bux93·7 miesięcy temu·4 comments

comments

bux93
·20 godzin temu·discuss
Well, the dB scale was once created on the basis that 1dB was thought to be the "just noticeable difference". Off the top of my head, I think trained listeners can actually notice differences of 0.3 dB, though this sort of thing is going to be frequency dependent too.

The eq-adjustments you'll find online often have adjustments ranging from 1 to 6dB in different frequencies. That's enough to notice.

Comparing settings/devices, it's very easy to notice. Just play some music on your laptop/phone speakers and move the device around a bit, and you'll hear striking differences in highs and lows.

However in isolation, I think most people wouldn't be able to say if a particular sound source is "good" or "bad". It takes a while for you to clock that, no, it's not the teams/zoom call that has bad quality, it's your headset that's dropping mids.
bux93
·5 dni temu·discuss
djbdns/tinydns can schedule a change and give out a lower and lower TTL the nearer the changeover time gets - a quick search doesn't show any newer implementations but this is surely a good way to do it.
bux93
·5 dni temu·discuss
It's to create an in-group, and you are in the out-group.
bux93
·8 dni temu·discuss
My car has wired carplay/android auto, but I have a nifty little USB dongle that receives carplay/android auto wirelessly and passes it to the car via USB. Sometimes called an AI box, I think.

These things contain a whole System-on-a-Chip board. I presume what it's acting like a middle box; pretending to be the headunit to the phone, and then sending the phone's output to the headunit, pretending to be a phone.

Since they need a quite beefy CPU to do that, I'm guessing they don't just pass along packets, but actually speak the protocol on both ends, and perhaps transcode the a/v stream.
bux93
·8 dni temu·discuss
That's in fact one of the pros of carplay/android auto as opposed to just putting your phone in one of those windscreen attached holders; you get to use the volume buttons on the steering wheel. Annoyingly my car doesn't have play/pause buttons on there, but if it had, they would work.
bux93
·17 dni temu·discuss
Agreed. Their privacy page even says they'll remove data if you withdraw consent, but they don't ask for consent. They also don't mention any you could object to data processing, claiming that "Processing is necessary to perform a contract with the data subject and to take steps toward the conclusion of a business relationship." which is a very contorted interpretation; taking steps towards the conclusion is about making quotes and such. It makes me sour on their claims "Keep your data private, compliant, and fully in the EU. As a privacy-first European company, we help you stay aligned with GDPR. No surprises. Full transparency."
bux93
·18 dni temu·discuss
Linux is only used as a kernel temporarily until GNU is finished.
bux93
·25 dni temu·discuss
This comparison to qemu gives some idea: https://www.unicorn-engine.org/docs/beyond_qemu.html

The ability to execute and inspect some code without any context (no OS, not even a complete binary) is useful for reverse/security engineering.
bux93
·25 dni temu·discuss
The parable-replication crisis is real though
bux93
·29 dni temu·discuss
If you book Ryanair, and your concentration slips up for a second, you WILL make a mistake and it WILL cost you money and/or inconvenience you. Then you might complain about that, and be met with smarmy, smug, smarter-than-you people who insist that they fly with Ryanair all the time and never pay too much, people who can't read shouldn't be allowed to book flights, etc. etc.

It's worth avoiding Ryanair just to avoid that scenario.
bux93
·w zeszłym miesiącu·discuss
I have fond memories of the, I think 1995, Compton's Interactive Encyclopedia. I think it was given away with new computers, like Encarta and Grolier's. I think I did buy the Compton's CD, but at a huge discount, since I bought it grey market (not bundled with a PC, but from a PC retailer).
bux93
·w zeszłym miesiącu·discuss
Flexi discs were cool inserts for some home computer magazines; you'd dub the flexi disc to music cassette, and the noise and beeps were computer programs for your home computer.
bux93
·w zeszłym miesiącu·discuss
Do you see "personal" and something that looks like your name in the path? That's your personal onedrive, like your home directory on a unix system.

See "sites" in the URL? That's a sharepoint site (AKA teams "shared" folder).

The former disappears (after a year) when the user license is removed. The latter is not associated with an individual user, so even if everyone in a team leaves the company it isn't just automatically removed.

Following was wrong and had been edited: The non-business personal onedrive was a box.com/dropbox/g-drive competitor. Microsoft moved its backend to Sharepoint at some time. (Onedrive for business used Sharepoint from the get-go). The integration of the personal drive, even though it's a descendent from the 'for business' product, is still quite unintuitive in my opinion.
bux93
·w zeszłym miesiącu·discuss
Not great for t-shirts
bux93
·w zeszłym miesiącu·discuss
That he backed PQ crypto that turned out to be broken later should be an argument in favor of hybrid (belts-and-suspender) schemes rather than against it. Embarassing behavior amounts to not much more than ad hominems. Hybrid KEMs are a good idea.
bux93
·w zeszłym miesiącu·discuss
Only if you ignore almost every input and output that neurons have.

https://www.quantamagazine.org/ai-is-nothing-like-a-brain-an... https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9665914/

This is why making more neuromorphic NNs is still an active area of research, although they typically all focus on another extremely simplified model (spiking neural networks).
bux93
·w zeszłym miesiącu·discuss
Do toilet breaks count towards the 30 minutes?
bux93
·w zeszłym miesiącu·discuss
In "peeking under the hood", it says quite honestly "SLAX is purely syntactic sugar."

I think that the XML syntax of XSLT itself was only one barrier for people to adopt XSLT, even in the XML heydays.

The main obstacles appear to me that the execution model is hard for people to graps; you need to think both as a parser (apply-templates/) and in a more declarative style at the same time. The XSLT can be in a completely different order to the document and in fact it can visit nodes in the document multiple times, hopping through nodes in a different order each time, with lovely constructs like apply-template with "mode" and "select" mixed with call-template by "name", plus you get to use xpath and for-each to boot. The control flow changes from the order in the input, to some predefined order, and back depending on when you decide to match(-template) or for-each. There's a lot going on at the same time! Fun times!
bux93
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
Wero is super confusing. They're in the business of acquiring different methods (I don't even know if they always buy them outright or if they merge or they are just associated in some way), branding them ALL wero, and announcing that every payment in every channel will be rolled out SOON via wero, without ever offering specifics.

So in The Netherlands wero is the new name of eCommerce payments, but in another country the new name for peer2peer. But no idea when p2p will launch in the Netherlands or when eCommerce will launch elsewhere. And if the existing services will be degraded when they are internationalized or merged.
bux93
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
The merchant typically uses stripe or adyen or whatever (mollie has a cute name!), a payment service provider or PSP.

The PSP looks at what methods the merchant wants to accept, which methods the user could potentially be using (based on e.g. country by geo IP or some delivery location) and show the relevant icons.

EU users will see schemes like wero or Przelewy24, Japanese customers will see 'konbini' among the icons, and US users may only see credit cards, Apple Pay and Affirm. There are TONS of payment services. Stripe lists 123 of them.

The merchant will want to exclude methods that have high costs (for themselves), maybe they also care about their customers not getting into debt (so no buy-now-pay-later or credit), and some payment methods have higher rates of disputes/chargebacks (e.g. Amex).

In general, most merchants will want to offer as many methods as possible to prevent consumers who have a preference (this week) for using account A over account B from bouncing.