“Components” means in this case the phone and the sticker.
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- squaresinger@lemmy.worldtoTechnology@lemmy.world•The Trump Mobile T1 Phone looks both bad and impossibleEnglish1·10 hours ago
- squaresinger@lemmy.worldtoTechnology@lemmy.world•The Trump Mobile T1 Phone looks both bad and impossibleEnglish2·10 hours ago
Don’t you know, selling phones is an official presidential act, thus he has immunity.
- squaresinger@lemmy.worldtoTechnology@lemmy.world•France Pushes Digital ID Check Laws For Platforms Like Reddit and BlueskyEnglish4·11 hours ago
Does this apply to smaller platforms like lemmy?
- squaresinger@lemmy.worldtoTechnology@lemmy.world•Yet another European government is ditching Microsoft for Linux - here's whyEnglish1·12 hours ago
Except that Windows does it without.
- squaresinger@lemmy.worldtoScience Memes@mander.xyz•Hertz, showing the difference between science and engineeringEnglish2·14 hours ago
It’s a broadband bang that can be heard across the whole spectrum. It becomes audible when listening to radio broadcasts.
Regular radio transmissions are comparatively narrow band, allowing lots of simultaneous transmissions in the same airspace, each on its own frequency. The spark gap transistor is very wide band, so it basically sounds as if you are sending a bang sound across all radio frequencies at the same time.
It wouldn’t destroy radio equipment, but the radio transmissions. It’s basically as if you’d use a radio jammer as a morse code transmitter.
Talking about it, which arch flavour is “btw”? /s
- squaresinger@lemmy.worldtoTechnology@lemmy.world•The end of Windows 10 is approaching, so it's time to consider Linux and LibreOfficeEnglish1·14 hours ago
I guess you aren’t wrong. There are a lot of advances but stability and small but really annoying bugs remain a huge pain point.
- squaresinger@lemmy.worldtoFuck Cars@lemmy.world•If you want to build apartments and homes in Nashville, you are required to build parking for cars. Otherwise, the city council will kill your project. English2·14 hours ago
At the same time it enforces car dependency since it arbitrarily reduces density making walking, biking and public transport unfeasible.
- squaresinger@lemmy.worldtoPeople Twitter@sh.itjust.works•US Military never really trained for these types of dog and pony shows1·17 hours ago
The original white house was burned to the ground by British/Canadian troops in 1814.
Yeah, ok, that counts as a war on US soil, but that’s still over 200 years ago.
Not to mention about 100 different American Indian Wars, though some of those were more slaughter than war.
Hard to really count them as wars for the reason you mentioned.
- squaresinger@lemmy.worldtoScience Memes@mander.xyz•Hertz, showing the difference between science and engineeringEnglish2·19 hours ago
Pretty much the first type of commercially viable radio transmitter was the spark-gap transmitter (“Knallfunkensender” in German). It worked by charging up some capacitors to up to 100kV and then letting them spark. This spark sent a massive banging noise on the whole radio spectrum, which could then be turned into an audible noise using a very simple receiver. That was then used to send morse codes (or similar encodings).
They went into service around 1900, and by 1920 it was illegal to use these because they would disrupt any and all other radio transmissions in the area with a massive loud bang.
- squaresinger@lemmy.worldtoScience Memes@mander.xyz•Hertz, showing the difference between science and engineeringEnglish16·19 hours ago
This.
There are often actual limits to what can be done, and there are practical limits. Especially in the early days of a technology it’s really hard to understand which limits are actual limits, practical limits or only short-term limits.
For example, in the 1800s, people thought that going faster than 30km/h would pose permanent health risks and wouldn’t be practical at all. We now know that 30km/h isn’t fast at all, but we do know that 1300km/h is pretty much the hard speed limit for land travel and that 200-300km/h is the practical limit for land travel (above that it becomes so power-inefficient and so dangerous that there’s hardly a point).
So when looking at the technology in an early state, it’s really hard to know what kind of limit you have hit.
GNOME is horrible. Looks pretty, but it’s opinionated approach means that nothing works as expected and you have to relearn how to use a stupid window manager.
I prefer Ook! Ook! over Ooga.
Are you using Arch btw?
- squaresinger@lemmy.worldtoNews@lemmy.world•‘They’re Taking Shirly': An Army Sergeant Thought His Family Was Safe. Then ICE Deported His Wife2·21 hours ago
True, but it only works if there will actually be a rebellion started by some higher-up.
- squaresinger@lemmy.worldtoscience@lemmy.world•They’ve Observed Teleworking for Four Years and Reached One Clear Conclusion: “Working From Home Makes Us Happier”English11·22 hours ago
Working from home has been the default for the last few millenia. Who would have thought that it could make people happier?
- squaresinger@lemmy.worldtoFuck Cars@lemmy.world•Tesla blows past stopped school bus and hits kid-sized dummies in FSD testsEnglish1·22 hours ago
Yeah, saying software quality sucks because foreigners are programming it is totally the same as saying that a specific law in one country is worse than the equivalent in another law. Sure.
- squaresinger@lemmy.worldtoNews@lemmy.world•‘They’re Taking Shirly': An Army Sergeant Thought His Family Was Safe. Then ICE Deported His Wife3·22 hours ago
That makes everything pretty difficult.
What generally triggers military coups is that one of these higher-ups rebels when or after they are removed.
But yeah, there’s a time window for that and it’s closing rapidly.
There won’t be a rebellion by the people. There hardly can be one, without a rebellion by the military.
- squaresinger@lemmy.worldtoPeople Twitter@sh.itjust.works•US Military never really trained for these types of dog and pony shows8·22 hours ago
I’m not sure either of these events can even be counted as an attack. Pearl Harbour is roughly 3800km from the mainland. It’s basically an overseas territory. An attack there is like saying the Falkland War was an attack on the UK.
And 9/11 was a terrorist attack, not a war. While it was a big attack, it was still only carried out by a handful of non-state-actors. That’s quite a different thing than an actual military attack by a country.
Afaik, the last war on US soil was the civil war.
The issue here is that if you stay for someone else, someone else will stay for you.
My family agreed that if something were to happen in our country (be it a war or something political like in the US right now), anyone who can will make it out as fast as possible and prepares the path for the others. Because it’s much easier toget a visum if you already have family there and a place to live.
And yes, you are right, nobody wants Americans in their country, but that’s just why it would be helpful to have someone prepare the way.