It's a moat. If you're afraid of losing market share you want your competitors to be busy finding out ways of passing these kind of rules you already figured out how to implement. That's why quality doesn't matter, only…
If you mean the 'screw in jawbone' style implants, those are generally made of titanium.
Sure. Standards like EDIFACT make XML seem like a big improvement.
Absolutely recommended! For more up to date content, a second edition was published in 2022.
It's the biggest model in the Yamaha monitor series and if you care about bass that much you probably also want a subwoofer ;)
Oh, I care about audio quality a lot more than most people, but not into 'magic cable' territory. There's no reason you can't gather statistics about a representative part of the population. It doesn't make sense to…
Yeah, considering the amount of sh*tposting about Wayland lacking features why don't they actually vibecode those?
>Generally all of these "debates" come down to people who think math > circuitry. All real designs are imperfect trade-offs. They all have issues, and arguing as if converters are perfect when they never are, and the…
Those things have huge drivers and are probably too big for a lot of rooms. Unless you (and your neighbors) absolutely want to have that thumping sound and you go out of your way to kill unwanted bass reflection you're…
Those laptops don't need to go to any landfill. They are much too precious to not recycle the metals and other materials and will be taken care of if you return them to the manufacturer. (by law, at least in the EU)
UEFI or its predecessor ACPI are complicated and support a long list of legacy stuff that has absolutely no value to Apple at all so why should they do the development? It's like asking Tesla for a fuel tank so it would…
Linux also supports secure boot and locking down your accounts. Open technology doesn't mean everybody can do everything.
Of course, some instruments require a lot of manual tweaking during fabrication and/or are too niche for manufacturers to invest in proper automation. Then there's the price of some raw materials (esp. wood and metal)…
Ah, the good old argument from authority fallacy? ;) Running a music store means you'll want to sell the most expensive stuff with the higher margins so you have every incentive to convince people cheap stuff is crap.…
There will always be crap sold to people who want a cheap gift or decorative item. But once you shop just a bit above the bottom price there are a surprising amount of decent instruments to be found.
I think musical instruments, especially digital ones like synthesizers or effects but also guitars and other acoustic instruments, have become a lot more affordable the last decade without severely impacting quality.…
It would be more efficient for travelers, but not really from a systems point of view. The Netherlands is densely populated and its railways are amond the busiest in Europe. If twice as many people took the train it…
I know, but it's been discontinued 2 years ago. As far as I know only the Kronos is still available new.
Anubis bot protection: https://anubis.techaro.lol
That's like saying Gavrilo Princip started World war 1. Of course he played a part but the people owning media and influencing the public debate for their own political goals play a much bigger part.
It's coming to an end due to the proliferation of cheap ARM boards. I think the Korg Kronos is the last holdout using a standard x86 PC mainboard now.
> Programs written in Java require installation of a middleware called Java runtime. It's possible to link or embed a Java runtime in an existing application.
We had that in the 90's with Java. Why would this approach succeed today?
> I haven't signed in to HP, haven't connected the printer to cloud. HP fixed a remote exploit a few years back. Theoretically someone could use your local wifi printer to install a persistent backdoor on your network.…
If you're just filming a/your talking head autofocus with face recognition is very reliably and helps when people unintentionally go out of focus ;)
It's a moat. If you're afraid of losing market share you want your competitors to be busy finding out ways of passing these kind of rules you already figured out how to implement. That's why quality doesn't matter, only…
If you mean the 'screw in jawbone' style implants, those are generally made of titanium.
Sure. Standards like EDIFACT make XML seem like a big improvement.
Absolutely recommended! For more up to date content, a second edition was published in 2022.
It's the biggest model in the Yamaha monitor series and if you care about bass that much you probably also want a subwoofer ;)
Oh, I care about audio quality a lot more than most people, but not into 'magic cable' territory. There's no reason you can't gather statistics about a representative part of the population. It doesn't make sense to…
Yeah, considering the amount of sh*tposting about Wayland lacking features why don't they actually vibecode those?
>Generally all of these "debates" come down to people who think math > circuitry. All real designs are imperfect trade-offs. They all have issues, and arguing as if converters are perfect when they never are, and the…
Those things have huge drivers and are probably too big for a lot of rooms. Unless you (and your neighbors) absolutely want to have that thumping sound and you go out of your way to kill unwanted bass reflection you're…
Those laptops don't need to go to any landfill. They are much too precious to not recycle the metals and other materials and will be taken care of if you return them to the manufacturer. (by law, at least in the EU)
UEFI or its predecessor ACPI are complicated and support a long list of legacy stuff that has absolutely no value to Apple at all so why should they do the development? It's like asking Tesla for a fuel tank so it would…
Linux also supports secure boot and locking down your accounts. Open technology doesn't mean everybody can do everything.
Of course, some instruments require a lot of manual tweaking during fabrication and/or are too niche for manufacturers to invest in proper automation. Then there's the price of some raw materials (esp. wood and metal)…
Ah, the good old argument from authority fallacy? ;) Running a music store means you'll want to sell the most expensive stuff with the higher margins so you have every incentive to convince people cheap stuff is crap.…
There will always be crap sold to people who want a cheap gift or decorative item. But once you shop just a bit above the bottom price there are a surprising amount of decent instruments to be found.
I think musical instruments, especially digital ones like synthesizers or effects but also guitars and other acoustic instruments, have become a lot more affordable the last decade without severely impacting quality.…
It would be more efficient for travelers, but not really from a systems point of view. The Netherlands is densely populated and its railways are amond the busiest in Europe. If twice as many people took the train it…
I know, but it's been discontinued 2 years ago. As far as I know only the Kronos is still available new.
Anubis bot protection: https://anubis.techaro.lol
That's like saying Gavrilo Princip started World war 1. Of course he played a part but the people owning media and influencing the public debate for their own political goals play a much bigger part.
It's coming to an end due to the proliferation of cheap ARM boards. I think the Korg Kronos is the last holdout using a standard x86 PC mainboard now.
> Programs written in Java require installation of a middleware called Java runtime. It's possible to link or embed a Java runtime in an existing application.
We had that in the 90's with Java. Why would this approach succeed today?
> I haven't signed in to HP, haven't connected the printer to cloud. HP fixed a remote exploit a few years back. Theoretically someone could use your local wifi printer to install a persistent backdoor on your network.…
If you're just filming a/your talking head autofocus with face recognition is very reliably and helps when people unintentionally go out of focus ;)