Comment Re:High end cables are a waste of money. (Score 1) 101
One other aspect of this is modern production regarding mixing and mastering. Music is pushed so far to the edge that drums are basically cut off at the high end and the whole thing sounds mushy.
My wife, who knows nothing about any of this beyond enjoying music, asked me one evening while we were listening to "Fat Bottomed Girls" why the drums sound so good compared to other music that we listen to. It's noticeable.
Comment Re:Story dupe; also, part of a wider Exxon push (Score 1) 61
And, yet, you also use their products daily but want to have no personal responsibility for that.
Comment Re:Do you really believe (Score 1) 122
We have "free college" in Tennessee and I believe in Kentucky as well. Most kids still opt for the "big university" experience, but you can become a nurse or teacher in Tennessee without having to pay anything.
Comment If they cared... (Score 1) 27
If they cared about "high-quality" they would have ditched Yelp years ago.
Comment Premiering actual apps, not web wrappers (Score 1) 28
Comment Re:The MS founder a villain? (Score 1) 176
In his younger days, he tied his "philanthropic" giving to other countries to their use of Microsoft products.
Comment Re:I can definitely see this in photos (Score 1) 118
I'm 56, and I'm really one of those freaks who just doesn't age. No gray hair, in great shape, finally noticing that my hands have a couple of wrinkles. But there are people my age who could pass for my grandparents, the last of whom died in 1994.
Comment Re:Ancient Users unite! (Score 1) 20
Comment Re:And how is Linus qualified to comment? (Score 1) 73
Microkernels are a great idea, but they need better hardware support (literally different architectural decisions) to work optimally. They can be made to work on modern CPUs, but they're never going to be great there. This presents a chicken/egg problem because nobody is going to invest a billion dollars making a new kind of CPU for an OS that doesn't yet exist.
Comment Re:Save money? (Score 4, Interesting) 206
Where I live, public chargers charge upwards of 80 cents/kWh. If you assume an efficiency of 16kwh/100km, that's 12.80/100km. Really not much (if any) cheaper than gas for an efficient car.
Home charging is where you save money.
To be fair, people in the gig economy don't tend to be good with math.
Comment Re:That's the nature of sharing (Score 3, Insightful) 103
There's no benefit to Sweden, plus Germany could just turn the nuclear plants back on and solve this issue tomorrow. Their choice.
Comment Re:Serious risks? (Score 2) 36
Generative AI - such as Chat GPT and friends - doesn't create anything. It predicts the next word or pixel based on the sum of the input into a neural net. There is no creativity. Thus, by definition, it can be no more "dangerous" than the training data.
The people screeching about the "dangers of AI!!!!" are basically the DEI department in the AI world. They add nothing of value but get paid too much to leech off the companies that were doing just fine without them. They have to keep everything at emergency level so nobody will notice that there's no substance to what they're saying.
Ignore them.
Comment You fell for this? (Score 1) 68
Companies don't have "climate goals" beyond claiming to care so they can increase sales.
Comment Re:Wasn't The World Supposed To End Already? (Score 1) 38
What a joke. Stacey Abrams, Hillary Clinton, Al Gore, John Kerry - any of those names ring a bell? All Democrats. All of them won according to them.