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Unity adding a fee for devs for each time a game is installed, after certain thresholds
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The CEO of Unity used to the the CEO of EA.
It explains a lot.
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Unity adding a fee for devs for each time a game is installed, after certain thresholds
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The CEO of Unity used to the the CEO of EA.
It explains a lot.
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Gen Z is forcing a workplace reckoning that should have happened years ago
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it took me way too long to realize that i can tell my boss to eat shit.
I think the difference in upbringing you're describing is a huge part of it.
Millennials went through spending our entire early adult lives being gaslit about how all the ways we were being abused were ultimately somehow our fault because our parents refused to recognize the systemic issues we were facing.
We may have come to the realization late, but we can certainly make sure younger generations know that they can and should call bullshit when they see it.
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Sync Ultra OTP is available for 109,99 €
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With that price I feel like the dev has 0 faith in lemmy getting very big
It feels kind of the opposite to me.
Going back and checking my Google account history, I paid $1 for Sync Pro. In 2012. And was using it up until last month. In retrospect, that was far too low a price for the utility I got out of the app for literally years.
If anything, it feels like the dev has learned that lesson and has priced the lifetime option where it's actually sustainable for them if Lemmy stays around.
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Kevin McCarthy is ousted as House speaker in a historic vote pushed by conservatives
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Refusing to cooperate with Democrats is what sank him.
He needed support from Democrats to keep the Speakership. He's spent the entire year giving them no reason to trust him -- including going on the Sunday shows this week knowing this vote was coming and trying to blame Democrats for the near shutdown.
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Man with handgun seeking governor arrested in Wisconsin Capitol, returns with assault rifle
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Easiest way to kickstart it is arming at-risk minorities.
California's strict gun laws have their roots in white conservatives' reaction to the Black Panthers marching with rifles while St. Reagan was governor of the state.
The upside of this strategy is that if the gun laws don't change, then at least those minorities will have some means of protecting themselves.
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Taiwan's TSMC to build semiconductor factory in Germany
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There's been an AMD/GloFo fab in Dresden for decades.
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Regarding the “Rust” shooting.
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The nature of how firearms are used in film generally requires breaking the normal fundamental rules of firearm safety. You can't just give somebody a quick rundown of the "four rules" and call it good.
Further, they're also often modified in ways that change what safety factors need to be considered.
It's the job of the on-set armorer to make sure firearms are safe and used in a safe manner because it's not reasonable to expect actors who are firearms laymen to understand everything that plays a factor in what is or isn't safe.
I do think this case is a little different, but that primarily has to do with Baldwin being a producer.
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After blocking hundreds of promotions, Tuberville said the US has 'the weakest military than we've probably had in my lifetime'
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The US has 11 out of 22.
This is only a partial picture.
The US has 11 supercarrier groups that individually rival the power of most nation's entire airforces. These are unrivaled by anything else in the world.
The US additionally has 9 America and Wasp class amphibious assault ships that have an airwing capability that rivals most other nations' carrier groups. The Navy plans for this force to eventually be made up of 11 America class ships.
So the reality is that the US' secondary aircraft carrier capability rivals that of the rest of the world combined. The total power disparity of the combined supercarrier and amphibious assault fleet is mind boggling.
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Aaron is no longer considered as cofounder by reddit. He fought for free speech.
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It's why all the appeals to "what would Aaron think" with the whole API thing were really off the mark.
spez and kn0thing were college buddies. Swartz was kind of pushed onto them by YC. I've never had the impression that they felt any particular attachment to him; he was a business partner that became involved at the behest of the people funding them, who left in the first couple of years.
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Amazon Customer Service has become awful
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Assuming you're in the US, I 100% would've done a credit card chargeback. Bank would've taken your side on that one.
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Google won’t repair cracked Pixel Watch screens
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Fitbit is owned by Google and has the same policy of not repairing cracked screens.
I owned a Sense 2 and was in a bicycle crash. Screen hit the pavement and shattered. Absolutely no options from Fitibit/Google to get it repaired.
I switched to Garmin and couldn't be happier.
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Are forced-reset triggers illegal machine guns? ATF and gun rights advocates at odds in court fights
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There’s the letter of the law and then there’s the spirit of the law.
Only the former should be legally enforceable. If you start enforcing the latter regardless of the former, the legal system stops being about rule of law and more about the subjective whims of those enforcing it.
If the letter of the law doesn't capture the intent, then the law needs to change, but laws shouldn't be subjectively enforced on the basis of what someone feels like they should mean rather than what they actually say.
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*Permanently Deleted*
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Worth noting that ATC is unusual in that there is both a maximum age that you can start (30) as well as a mandatory retirement age (56).
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Man with handgun seeking governor arrested in Wisconsin Capitol, returns with assault rifle
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The reality is that they already have all the excuse they need.
Personally, I'm not a fan of the side that's perfectly happy with pursuing genocide having the perception that they have a monopoly of violence.
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Chamberlain shuts off access to MyQ’s APIs, breaking smart home integrations
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Most security systems these days are just whitelabeled zwave etc sensors with a proprietary hub and a monthly charge.
The nice thing about HA is that you can pull almost everything into it and then add whatever automations you want. Recent example was my SO complaining about how dark it was going to the car when they leave in the morning. Super easy to set up an automation that turns on the floodlight switches when the front door opens between dusk and dawn. All kinds of stuff like that that's really useful.
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Hunter Biden, the son of the President, is indicted on federal gun charges
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A lot of gun rights groups have been champing at the bit for a good chance to challenge that section of Form 4473 for a while now. A common point of contention is that e.g., holding a medical marijuana card would be a disqualifier if truthfully filling out a 4473. It's so rarely actually prosecuted that finding a test case isn't particularly easy, though.
It will be interesting -- and telling -- to see how they react to this case.
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Microsoft’s repairability push now extends to Xbox controllers, too
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Hall effect has been the norm in all but the cheapest sim gear (sticks, throttles, etc) for a very long time now.
Hall effect gimbals on radio control/drone controllers have been pretty common for some time, too.
It's mostly that this is a solved problem that more general purpose controllers are just now catching up to after the problem's been exacerbated by the smaller gimbals used in modern controllers.
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voron 2.4 - anybody with actual experience
A 2.4 will be better than an Ender 3, but there are better options out there. The flying gantry is a solution in search of a problem, the gantry is heavy and not particularly rigid, Voron toolheads don't cool particularly well, the rigid bed mounting is a recipe for bed taco, etc.
Which isn't to say that V2s are bad printers -- they can turn out great prints. But if you're starting fresh today, I'd seriously consider any number of printers over it.
If you want to stay within the Voron ecosystem for whatever reason, the Trident's a better design. It still lacks things like kinematic bed mounting that are standard fair on other designs today, though. I'd stay away from Tap on any of them -- I'm still baffled that thing gets promoted as being a good idea.
In terms of bang for your buck, it's incredibly difficult to beat the VzBot kits. It'll be a less expensive and more capable machine than a V2.4. There are panels available to enclose it. I don't love the Z stage on it, but I can overlook it given the value the rest of the printer gets you.
The Annex K3 is an absolutely killer little machine, but is only 180x180 build volume. The small build volume is free rigidity, though, and K3s can be made true high temp capable with less relative effort than a lot of printers. I'm not as big a fan of the larger Annex printers (K1/K2), personally.
The Rat Rig v-Core was probably the best value CoreXY before the VzBot kits came around. Enclosing them is more of a challenge due to all the PETG parts, though. The EVA toolhead provides a ton of flexibility for mixing and matching parts, if that's your thing.
In terms of take it out of the box and print, nothing beats the Bambu X1 and P1P. They're great units. They're a closed ecosystem though, and not modification friendly if that's what you want.
My main workhorse printer's a Railcore II. Great machine, but the design's aging and I generally wouldn't recommend a new build today outside of a few very specific applications. It was cutting edge when the design was released in 2018, but, as with the 2.4, the wider community has learned a lot since then about fundamental printer design and there are better options now.
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What’s the worst car you’ve ever driven?
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The transmission in those things is an amazing level of suck, too. It's this bizarre automatic manual thing that's just awful to drive.
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Microsoft wants to move Windows fully to the cloud
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I would assume it's companies that are running computer kiosks, point-of-sale systems, or systems that would otherwise be extremely locked-down (like bank teller systems).
As an example, we're currently evaluating it as an option for doctors to access certain EMRs offsite where it doesn't make sense to provide them an entire workstation, e.g., community doctors working from their private practices.