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Comment Re: They used to be annoying (Score 1) 269

Exactly - they will stop awarding "pollution-reduction credits" for installing this non-mandated and optional to use feature.

There is absolutely nothing preventing automakers from keeping this feature in future car models...

And most of them will as it's less about pollution and more about cutting fuel usage... Which lets them get that MPG (or L/100KM) figure down in sales brochures. Also most other countries are going to keep the requirement and the US will adopt it when the current government finally collapses.

The bigger the engine, the more you notice the fuel consumption dropping, I had a BMW M240i and it was easy to keep the system from kicking in (just hold down the clutch... most steering wheel attendants will need to ask a real driver what that is) and the difference was a good couple of (British) MPGs over a 30 minute in town commute (a lot of stop-start). The fact was back in 2017 the system was good enough that I never bothered disabling it permanently as it was practically instant (and if I wanted to start the engine earlier, I could just use the clutch). This was a German 3L turbo, I imagine the difference it makes on an American engine would be even greater.

Comment Re:Best Scifi from that Era (Score 1) 68

Yeah, specifically the evolution of G'Kar and Londo, their journey affected everyone around them. The chemistry they had was something else. And most of all, neither could be seen as strictly good or evil, they were both patriots, misguided at times and both had to learn painful lessons on their way to redemption.

With B5, it was really the side characters that made the show, far more than the main characters.

Londo and G'Kar both played brilliantly, Same with Garibaldi and Ivonova. Even the comic relief characters like Lennier and Vir, I always felt Londo's line of "Never let yourself become a joke to them Vir" (something along those lines) was a bit of fourth wall breaking showing that Vir Coto had stopped being mere comic relief.

The acting was terrible, but not really beyond the standard of 90s scifi.

Comment Re:Wow, that sounds familiar (Score 1) 68

Just replace Earth with USA. 'Earth descends into fascism and cuts off relations with its allies'

Given what is happening in the US I have been wondering for a while now, did JMS really see this coming 30 years ago or is this just a case of life imitating art. There are a lot of parables between Presidents Trump and Clark.

Comment Re:Is it really about protecting people? (Score 2) 21

Such a serious clampdown would probably stifle legitimate criticism of the government or views that are "wrong" to avoid fines. Ultimately, the government can control the message by claiming "manipulation."

You're familiar with India, right?

Modi has no intention of letting go of power. They're a democracy in name only.

As much as I think that Social Media corporations need to be held to account, this is just blatant over-reach and utterly pointless as the government has little power outside their own borders, even China can't police the worlds internet content and not through lack of trying (the US will have exactly the same problem if it tried to do the same). I predict this will just result in the Indian government being largely ignored, it's not like the EU will support them given how much they're begging European governments to loosen the migration rules for Indians.

Comment Re:Sheer, unadulderated bollocks (Score 1) 113

Think about how people actually want to use their computers. They want to be able to play Steam games, for example. They want to be able to run a few apps under WINE maybe, or some commercial software that is only distributed as a binary. Even some of the open source stuff can have issues on ARM, as I have found with embedded Raspberry Pi stuff.

Whatever the reason, whoever is to blame, the bottom line for the user is that stuff doesn't work.

Most people just need a web browser these days, oddly enough we can thank Apple for hurrying that up. For this, something like a Chromebook is more than powerful enough, just not comfortable to use for extended periods (which is the problem phones and tablets have). ARM have struggled to break into the laptop/desktop space because X86-64 has been cheap enough and powerful enough that we haven't needed a cheaper architecture and the drawbacks haven't been a hinderance. It's less about the blame (on the user or otherwise) and simply about inertia, there isn't an impetus to change the hardware.

An impetus to change the software is coming (here for some of us) but this will take time due to inertia and resistance to change, however as more people start to use Linux you'll end up with even the laggards moving to it eventually.

I'm in the process of experimenting with gaming on Steam (and yeah, taking my sweet arse time about it) and I'm finding the biggest problems I'm having are trying to migrate my libraries from Windows to Linux (to be fair, I'm trying to use my existing Steam library on NTFS drives). I think if you're starting out fresh it'll be far easier. Also, those who want to game already know about hardware. Gamers are usually early adopters for PCs.

Comment Re:An interesting project (Score 0) 113

I admin a bunch of Linux servers and workstations, and my daily driver for that has been a Mac. Admittedly mine is a simpler use case than what you're doing - I mean, mostly I just need a terminal, python to run ansible, ssh, and I like bbedit for editing - but macOS works as well as Linux for my particular use case.

My biggest complaint is - I feel like Apple's software quality has been gradually trending downhill over the past decade or more. The hardware engineering is still first-rate, but the OS and Apple-developed tools are just 'meh' at best. Some of the Tahoe bugs, even at 26.3, are absurd... which is why I'm sticking w/ Sonoma as long as it gets support.

But as to the actual topic: The Asahi folks are quite clear regarding what works and what doesn't work, and with which Apple processors. None of that should've been a surprise for the author, IMHO.

Apple's software (and hardware) quality has been bad for ages, it's just that the Reality Distortion Field is down and the shiny marketing is wearing off as everyone has become acclimatised to it. Basically people are now seeing Apple products for what they are, overpriced.

Apple has always been a massive cult, but it's gone from the kind of cult that did Waco to the kind of cult your dad joins in his 50s where everyone wears sandal and socks and pretends to be satisfied (also the odd bit of dogging or wife swapping but It's a modern society so who are we to judge).

Comment Re:Smash their Ring cameras? (Score 2) 41

Earlier the previous evening, my Ring camera managed to capture the neighbor's teenager backing into my parked work van. Thanks to the camera, I've got timestamped footage footage of both the before and after. Now, you might be thinking to yourself "Surely they owned up to their mistake and you don't need surveillance footage?" Nope, the parent/guardian was extremely belligerent about the whole thing, with a main character attitude like their kid was just playing GTA and hitting a NPC's parked car is no big deal.

So no, I won't be smashing my Ring camera. We need these things because some people no longer do the right thing even when you've got them on video. I used to wonder why almost everyone in Russia seemed to have a dashcam - now I completely understand why.

This is not a new thing, especially in the US.

The idea that people owned up to things because it is the right thing to do hasn't been true for my entire life, probably far longer than that.

It's a result of our ultra capitalist society, altruism is one of the first victims of extremism.

However no-one embodies the quality more than faceless, well protected corporations. I have a dash cam (AU/UK) because if I'm involved in a car crash I want to be able to prove beyond doubt it wasn't me, people will lie when they know the truth will cost them... However the last thing I'd want to do is upload that to someone else who has the right to sell it to whomever they want. Sure, keep a camera for security. It's quite prudent in this day and age, but get one that stores the video locally otherwise you're not just telegraphing your life to all and sundry, you also risk losing access to the footage yourself when they decide that they can charge you for access as well as subscription.

Comment Re:A woman down the street got caught cheating by (Score 1) 70

"Why don't you open the curtains and let some light in" they ask... Because every mother fucker has a surveillance camera these days Karen... every... fucking... one.

This is before you try to explain to them that they're all uploading to the mother ship (Google, Amazon, MS, et al. ). after which they'll look at you gormlessly.

Comment Re:Why does the gig economy exist? [Re:exists bec. (Score 1) 97

The gig economy exists because of immigration,

No. The gig economy exists because it is a work-around capitalism has found to employ people without treating them as employees, and hence not giving them the benefits of employees.

This, the gig economy exists because some companies found a method of employing people without having to say they're legally employed, ergo skirting employment laws, taxes, denying them benefits and being able to get rid of them if they dare challenge the management.

Its like companies that pay cash to hire people without putting them on the books... except they've found a way to do so in plain sight and have courts back them up.

Comment Re:the optimal fix is workweek, not taxation. (Score 1) 97

Raising corporate profit taxes, income taxes, and inheritance taxes is the way to go. Much of the distribution problem is a result of tax changes that benefit the wealthy which have been the policies of every Republican administration since Reagan.

Amazing that the "taxes are just wealth redistribution" or "taxes are theft" crowd never seem to get where the taxes are being redistributed to.

Comment Re:+1 Informative (Score 2) 338

to quote you that's "bullshit, bullshit & more bullshit".
ICE is specifically acting like thugs in Blue cities because that's what Trump, Miller, etc want, to provoke a violent reaction as a pretext to invoke the Insurrection Act and to normalize using government thugs for enforcement and intimidation which they'll ramp up for the midterms to "true to vote"

And on top of that... they're dumb enough to believe that once that has happened the apparatus the state has constructed won't be turned against them.

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