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Comment Re:Doesn't pass the smell test (Score 4, Insightful) 84

Lets ignore for a moment the fact that privately funding an addition to the White House invites all kinds of inappropriate opportunity for the sort of quid pro quo one would generally want to presumably not have ones government engaged in ...

The ballroom triples the square footage. Hosting gets more expensive, maintenance gets more expensive, heating gets, cleaning gets more expensive. Building a thing is not the only cost associated with that thing.

Comment Re: I would expect (Score 1) 32

I feel like a large number of users here are still wailing against the Microsoft of 15 years ago. They're still hostile to home edition end users, of course, but they've very much cleaned up their technical posture compared to ages ago. Are they perfect? No, but they're nowhere near as developer/admin/OSS/*nix/etc hostile as they used to be.

Submission + - £1.5bn legal action in UK against Apple over wallet's 'hidden fees' (theguardian.com)

AmiMoJo writes: The financial campaigner James Daley has launched a £1.5bn class action lawsuit against Apple over its mobile phone wallet, claiming the US tech company blocked competition and charged hidden fees that ultimately harmed 50 million UK consumers.

The lawsuit takes aim at Apple Pay, which they say has been the only contactless payment service available for iPhone users in Britain over the past decade.

Daley, who is the founder of the advocacy group Fairer Finance, claims this situation amounted to anti-competitive behaviour and allowed Apple to charge hidden fees, ultimately pushing up costs for banks that passed charges on to consumers, regardless of whether they owned an iPhone.

Submission + - Cheap green tech allows faster path to electrification for the developing world (japantimes.co.jp)

Mr. Dollar Ton writes: According to a new report from a think tank, "Ember", the availability of cheap green tech can have developing countries profit from earlier investment and skip steps in the transition from fossil to alternatives.

India is put forward as an example. While china’s rapid electrification has been hailed as a miracle, by some measures, India is moving ahead faster than China did when it was at similar levels of economic development. It’s an indication that clean electricity could be the most direct way to boost growth for other developing economies.

That’s mainly because India has access to solar panels and electric cars at a much lower price than China did about a decade ago. Chinese investments lowered the costs of what experts call "modular technologies” — the production of each solar panel, battery cell and electric car enables engineers to learn how to make it more efficiently.

India's per-capita consumption of oil for road transport is 60% lower than when China hit that milestone. As a result India’s peak road-oil consumption per person will likely never reach Chinese levels.

Submission + - Work-from-office mandate? Expect top talent turnover, culture rot (cio.com)

snydeq writes: Work-from-office mandates are accelerating but the push toward in-person work environments will make it more difficult for IT leaders to retain and recruit staff, some experts say. Over the past year, many companies, including IT giants Amazon and Microsoft, have required employees to work from the office. Advocates of in-person work expect increased productivity and improved collaboration, although several studies suggest that workers can be just as productive when working remotely, and employment experts say collaboration gains can be difficult to measure. Organizations requiring IT workers to commute to an office need to ground decisions in value creation, focus on data-driven results, and avoid badge-swipe metrics, employment experts say. “In addition to resistance, there would also be the risk of talent turnover,” Converge CTO Lawrence Wolfe says. “The truth is, both physical and virtual collaboration provide tremendous value.”

Submission + - Nvidia DLSS Gaming on ARM (interfacinglinux.com)

VennStone writes: Gaming on ARM with NVIDIA and DLSS is no longer theoretical. Using an Orange Pi 6 Plus, an NVMe M.2 to PCIe extender, and a desktop Nvidia GPU, it's now possible to run Windows games through Wine with DLSS enabled on Linux. Titles like Cyberpunk 2077 and The Witcher 3 achieve usable frame rates via FEX, despite running on an ARM SBC.

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

Submission + - Why some people get bad colds and others don't (sciencedaily.com)

alternative_right writes: Scientists found that nasal cells act as a first line of defense against the common cold, working together to block rhinovirus soon after infection. A fast antiviral response can stop the virus before symptoms appear. If that response is weakened or delayed, the virus spreads and causes inflammation and breathing problems. The study highlights why the body’s reaction matters more than the virus alone.

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