Has someone asked what there IS to defend if not people’s lives?
Geek. Bourgondiër. Belgistani. Add label here.
Has someone asked what there IS to defend if not people’s lives?
Well, the US is involved in the war, even if indirectly, and considers Ukraine a strategic partner, so one could say he’s acting against the interests of the US.
He’s a cunt. Always had been, always will be.
This thing, however, is being blown up by the police unions because quickie reneged on an already done deal about the first raise for police officers in years.
It’s quite fun seeing him squirm, though 😁
Zip drives (do those things even exist anymore?) do not use tape cartridges, they are basically oversized floppies.
If you’re actually using tape drives (LTO media, presumably), just step away from the damn HP software. I manage literal petabytes on tape, and LTO media comes with a lifetime warranty. Yes, even HP branded cartridges - there’s only two actual manufacturers left, Fujifilm and, iirc, Sony.
Same for the drive, in fact - HP stopped producing them years ago, IBM is the only manufacturer left.
You may have made up the numbers, but I have actually seen HP inkjets for 50€. I do not believe it is physically possible to produce and distribute them at that price without taking a loss - don’t forget that that price includes the seller and every middleman’s profit margin.
I don’t know for sure, I’m not an avid watcher, but I’ve seen several pretty big channels talk about this in their videos and ask people to check their subscription because it does apparently happen.
That’s the real kicker, isn’t it? “They’re stealing our jobs”… but nobody else is willing to do said jobs.
The thing is, just like software subscriptions, you aren’t buying a piece of software, you’re buying the right to use it. You can be pretty sure that they have legalese in the eula that says that your right to use the software expires with non-use. I wouldn’t be surprised if they can even let it expire by simple deciding to no longer support it.
And what do you think will happen if their license servers ever go offline?
For the longest time I never bought anything digital, but I eventually caved to steam. I still blatantly refuse to join other digital platforms, except gog where I can download the software and it works without any remote server.
Same for music: I refuse to use Spotify. I buy from 7digital and the like, where I can download either mp3 or FLAC.
Hey, Tony, I’ll give you five bucks and a swift kick in the nuts for Sony. It’s the best offer I ever made for it!
Ik ben Vlaming. Je parle français, English, ein bisschen Deutsch, och jag talar bara lite Svensk. La plupart effectivement appris pour aller en voyage, aussi bien que quelques mots de lituanien (long oublié), et je sais toujours me présenter et commander deux bières en slovaque.
Dvo pivo, prosim!
And they didn’t mention politics at all, they said not everyone wants to be reminded of the orange shitstain. I agree with them.
About bloody time. MS should have been forcibly split up back in the early 2000’s when they lost the antitrust case about internet explorer.
The finance ministry of the world?
Technically, no, but then they need another source of revenue, because servers at that scale aren’t cheap.
Microsoft bought it. They’re not going to let their paying userbase of millions of coders evaporate…
What we need is a generation of politicians who understand that public services don’t lose money, they cost money - because they’re a public service, not a business. This mindset about “illegal riders” is all wrong. Imagine having to buy a ticket to use the pavement.
Lemmy is more reddit-like, while mastodon is more twitter-like.
They do federate, so yes, you should be able to see, like and comment between them.
As a drinker of both, I’ll have you know coffee a baked bean beverage, thank you very much.
Good. Maybe the envoy can explain the concept of freedom of expression to them. It’s going to come as rather a shock…
Quite the opposite. Use drives from as many different manufacturers as you can, especially when buying them at the same time. You want to avoid similar lifecycles and similar potential fabrication defects as much as possible, because those things increase the likelihood that they will fall close to each other - particularly with the stress of rebuilding the first one that failed.