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I rarely see RSS buttons on websites any more, rarely does a podcast link to an RSS feed

Now it has working auto update they should get loads more downloads

The old human:

1. Born into plague 2. Never learns maths or writing 3. Nor spelling 4. Half the time your life ends before childhood does 5. Nothing happens in your life


I can't believe that people unironically believe that humans lived unfulfilling lives until mass consumerism started. Incredible.

Just because we don't know what daily life looked like doesn't mean "nothing happened".


Maybe we can have modern medicine AND no social media.

Yes, because those are clearly the only two choices.

Touche.

So what’s the takeaway, life a bitch and then you die?


However they applied it to all phones of that model, not just ones with degraded batteries

No, it was dynamic based on voltage. iPhones with worn batteries had higher performance at full battery and swapping the battery with a fresh replacement restored full performance even at low battery percentage. In fact this is how the slowdown was discovered: someone replaced their iPhone battery with a non-genuine replacement and it got noticeably faster.

Given that a) most human rated rockets have had 0 flights before use, and b) I'd expect each starship to have at least 10 flights, and at least 100 in total without mishap before launching, the statistics should be good

I don’t think (a) is true. The Shuttle flew with people on its maiden voyage, but that’s the only one I can think of.

(b) is true and should make it substantially safer than other launch systems. But given how narrow the margins are for something going wrong (zero ability to land safely with all engines dead, for example) it’s still going to be pretty dangerous compared to more mundane forms of travel.


Most rockets flew test flights before sticking people inside the same model, but most rockets are also single use and so each stack is fundamentally new.

A future starship could plausibly be the first rocket to fly to space unmanned, return, and then fly humans to space!


Don't use the homepage, use the subscriptions page


When you turn off search history, it makes the homepage useless and the subscriptions page becomes unavoidably the next step.

Discovery of content happens in the sidebar from videos I enjoy now, and only when I'm in the mood to discover something.


Quassel is basically self hosted irccloud, I use it on 5 computers, Windows, Linux and Android, it's great


https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42385393 When the only copy of your computer is 15 billion miles away, and the documentation is OCR'd 50 year old printouts, and no one recorded what was patched when


Do you assume laws cannot be updated?


Low-level EU Regulations like this take approximately 3 years to be drafted and adopted (validated).

A whole decade is often needed if the member states consider a new mandate is needed, typically a directive or regulation or treaty clause giving the EC authority and a framework to regulate something.

Any update to this regulation will have to wait at least 3 years after a new standard has been agreed on. And there will probably be a period for adoption by the industry, typically 2 years. So at least 5 years after everyone has agreed what is needed. It most probably won't be updated for the next 25 years.


Considering the number of stupid laws that haven’t been updated, and the conflicting interests every time an update is proposed, I answer that it can be safely assumed the law will never be updated in most circumstances.


The assumption that a law that directly influences millions of people daily lives and has close to 0 direct budget costs associated with it won't be updated when it becomes counterproductive is quite funny.

Are you American per chance?


The EU's cookie law still requires a banner for everything except "strictly necessary cookies",[1] which means you must have a banner if you use cookies to save preferred language, default location, or any internal analytics data (such as New Relic, Datadog, etc).

So yes, I think updating the law will take a significant amount of time.

1. https://gdpr.eu/cookies/


You do not need a banner, you need informed consent. I'm sure there are other ways of getting consent other than a half screen pop-up with a big red accept button on first visit, but they probably won't get 70% "opt in" rate.


Law: The optimum behaviour is annoying banners.

Companies: Annoying banners.

Legislators: Mission Accomplished. A win for the good guys!

Situation persists for at least a decade.


A more accurate version:

Law: You have to get some form of affirmative consent if you want to do specific often-abused things.

Companies: We'll do it in the most obnoxious way possible ("here are our 853 technology partners... no, there's not a 'deselect all' option, have fun clicking") so people blame the law instead of the industry that didn't want to allow consent at all.


There's always a deselect all option (or rather, the equivalent "accept only the technically required ones"), because it's required by law. Sometimes the operator tries to hide the option. That, too, is illegal.


There is frequently not a "deselect all" option; there's a reason regulators keep having to warn about it.

https://ico.org.uk/about-the-ico/media-centre/news-and-blogs...


I so wish that "our 1234 trusted partners" was an exaggeration.


Selecting the language you want actually sounds like "functionality that has been explicitly requested by the user" who "did a positive action to request a service with a clearly defined perimeter". This is clearly allowed.

https://ec.europa.eu/justice/article-29/documentation/opinio...


Section 3.6 says that UI customizations such as language preferences are only exempt if they last for a session (no more than a few hours). Anything longer requires a cookie notice, though they do claim that a less prominent notice than a modal is acceptable.


There's no section 3.6.

It doesn't say only a few hours.

The optimum behaviour under the law is not to show a cookie banner. It's not to collect copious amounts of data.

You only had 8 years to learn about the law, and you still remain willingly ignorant and misinformed about it.


Page 8 of the PDF[1]: 3.6 UI customization cookies

> These customization functionalities are thus explicitly enabled by the user of an information society service (e.g. by clicking on button or ticking a box) although in the absence of additional information the intention of the user could not be interpreted as a preference to remember that choice for longer than a browser session (or no more than a few additional hours). As such only session (or short term) cookies storing such information are exempted under CRITERION B.

It specifically says that a consent notice is required for UI customization cookies that persist more than a few hours, and it gives an example of preferred language as one of those UI customizations.

1. https://ec.europa.eu/justice/article-29/documentation/opinio...


> Page 8 of the PDF[1]: 3.6 UI customization cookies

What's "Opinion 04/2012 on Cookie Consent Exemption" adopted on 2012, 4 years before GDPR?

Edit On top of that, actual quote:

--- start quote ---

"They may be session cookies or have a lifespan counted in weeks or months, depending on their purpose

... addition of additional information in a prominent location (e.g. “uses cookies” written next to the flag) would constitute sufficient information for valid consent to remember the user’s preference for a longer duration,

--- end quote ---

12 years since this opinion, 8 years since GDPR, and you still have no idea about either.


Sounds perfect to me.


Maybe I am dense but I cannot find the requirement for cookie-banners in your link.


You're linking to a fake website made by the private company behind Proton Mail, that tries to present itself as an official EU site. What they claim will be in their own financial interest, and not what the GDPR law says.

From the horses mouth:

"GDPR.EU is a website operated by Proton Technologies AG, which is co-funded by Project REP-791727-1 of the Horizon 2020 Framework Programme of the European Union. This is not an official EU Commission or Government resource. The europa.eu webpage concerning GDPR can be found here. Nothing found in this portal constitutes legal advice."


GDPR isn't the cookie law. It is a law regulating storage of personal data overall. The banners are a result of greed and incompetence. The companies made stupid amount of money by closely profiling every single individual using cookies and fingerprinting. They are in malicious compliance and if the behavior continues the regulation may become more stringent.


I never said the GDPR was the cookie law. I was just linking to a site that summarized the actual law. If storing preferred language in a cookie (without any uniquely identifying info) does not require a cookie banner, then I'd be happy to be corrected on that.


You don’t need an intrusive banner on page open. You just need consent.

If the user is saving a setting like a language preference, just put “by saving this preference you agree for us to store the setting” next to the option/OK button (it’s really implicit just like their shopping cart example, but this is if you want to be really paranoid)


If it cannot be linked to you, it's no longer PII, and doesn't require consent.

As easy as that.


Can't see the source


It seems marketing BS… will they open source the ARM710 Verilog/VHDL?

Probably the board schematic… what a joke


By that logic any OSHW project using integrated circuits is closed-source. After all, the PDK is proprietary, the fab's production pipeline isn't publicly available, and there isn't even a way to confirm the HDL supplied is actually what is being used in the chip!

If we want truly open-source hardware we'll have to go back to relay computers. Everything beyond that is "a joke".


No love for a verilog design in an fpga as open source hardware?

It’s a flawed surrogate of course - lower performance and higher cost than an asic produced at volume - but the open source hardware aspect is very strong.


The circuitry (ie transistor level) of the FPGA is still closed no?


Yes, but there are many different fpga’s, many of which many verilog will run on, which to my mind makes the downsides of proprietyness low enough that this might be the sweet spot to stop at going down the stack..

however awesome an open source fabbed asic or fpga would be of course.


It's not open unless you can make it from sand.

Actually, it's not open unless you can make it from hydrogen atoms.


That’s going too far. RYF certification is what you could reasonably require.


> By that logic any OSHW project using integrated circuits is closed-source.

There are degrees to things. It's not cool to try to claim the prestige of "open source" when the entire board is nothing but a vehicle for your very-much-closed processor design.


> when the entire board is nothing but a vehicle

You can get the board design and order it manufactured yourself, or you can change it to suit a different processor that's more open.


What about the many real open source RISC V?


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