Comment Re:Slashdot: (Score 1) 126
Graduates have massive debts in most cases, right?
Graduates have massive debts in most cases, right?
Back when we weren't so hardcore capitalist, people used to have a job for life and would stick with a company even after they skilled up. The company would reward them with better salary as they became more senior.
Nowadays the only way to get a decent salary bump is to move company, and people do that a lot because the cost of living is so high.
Operation Spiderweb
No, Apple didn't do that. It reduced it to avoid random restarts and sudden loss of power events. Yes, they should have been more upfront about it, but it wasn't some nefarious plan to get you to upgrade your phone.
Owning several old phones, this does not seem to be an issue with any of them.
Nor is it widely reported in Android circles.
Random restarts sounds like a hardware design problem, not a battery problem. Or just an excuse to deliberately hobble old phones because you haven't ponied up £1,000 for a new one in more than a year.
Under New Zealand law, everyone will be entitled to a full refund.
Collect the money and move to something better.
This is pretty much the only way to stop this... Make the companies financially liable. Full refunds for every copy sold.
This is why Stop Killing Games is so important, it starts with games as it's easy to dismiss that as "they're just video games" but if this kind of behaviour is accepted there, it'll slowly move to consumer and business software until the frog is well and truly boiled.
when you married her.
Have you ever handled a Dell XPS laptop? They don't "feel cheap." They're the state-of-the-art in what we used to call "Ultrabooks."
So they feel Ultracheap?
They are also one of the few parts of the electronics hobby that isn't toxic. A very welcome change.
I misremembered. It's been some years since I did it.
We found that submersion to 10cm was often worse than submersion beyond 1m. I think it was the lack of compression on gaskets. Our pre-compliance test was a drainpipe blocked off at the bottom, and string.
Samsung used to make waterproof phones where you could replace the battery. I'd give up the ability to fully submerge if it meant the battery could be swapped out.
For me it's a big deal. I had a hell of a time replacing my Pixel XL battery. I'm keeping that thing alive forever, because it has unlimited full quality photo uploads to Google Photos.
This is the usual way the EU does this stuff. They don't get too specific, they let courts figure that out and update their rules if necessary.
It is disappointing that waterproof devices are not included, like IP68 phones. Then again I wonder if IP68 rating is enough to claim that, because typically if they say IP68 and you submerge the phone, they don't want to fix it under warranty. IP68 means a water jet, so I suppose it's not actually submersion, but I think a manufacturer might have a hard time arguing it with a court that is likely to side with the consumer's understanding of words like "waterproof".
Some people get them for free, but most people do have to pay if they want them. Or not if their employer offers them.
Same with COVID now, those were free but now only certain people get them for nowt and the rest have to pay.
Meanwhile, X.AI has asked the EPA for permission to release up to 100 million hyperfecund pesticide-resistant male mosquitoes in California and New York over two years to own the libs.
Fudge, obviously I meant to reply to the OP. Your post clearly has some basis in being informed on the subject.
Mathematicians practice absolute freedom. -- Henry Adams