[-] kalleboo@lemmy.world 2 points 12 hours ago* (last edited 12 hours ago)

The main cause of bitrot in older disks is the organic dyes fading (aside from REALLY cheap disks where delamination was a problem), whereas M-Disc uses an inorganic carbon material

[-] kalleboo@lemmy.world 21 points 2 days ago

iPhones don't come with those expensive high-bandwidth cables, they come with charging cables that only do USB 2.0

[-] kalleboo@lemmy.world 3 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

On a warship? They’d have still seen it.

It took 6 months to discover, and even then it was by techs who went to physically install different hardware saw the dish hardware mounted to the ship. That's the real WTF here, how do these ships not have some kind of passive RF scanning/rogue AP detection??

It was seen by regular enlisted people who saw the network on their phones and left comment sheets asking WTF it was, but the person in question snatched up the papers before they got to the officers. If they had hidden the SSID, nobody would have seen it because nobody scans for hidden SSIDs on their phones.

[-] kalleboo@lemmy.world 61 points 4 days ago

People: Specifically add "site:reddit" to their searches to avoid slop and get real human responses

Reddit: Replaces the real human responses with slop

How can Spez be so clueless

[-] kalleboo@lemmy.world 1 points 5 days ago

The gatekeeper legislation sets minimums for revenue before you're counted as a gatekeeper, and all the game consoles are too small a market to count.

[-] kalleboo@lemmy.world 28 points 2 months ago

Pressed discs (like movies) are physically... pressed. They make a metal mould which is then stamped into melted plastic to make the pits and lands and then coated with a metal film to make the reflected backing, filling in the pits. This makes manufacturing of millions of disks extremely cheap since it takes seconds per disc. Burning commercial disks individually in thousands of burners would be way too slow/expensive.

[-] kalleboo@lemmy.world 32 points 2 months ago

Pressed discs have a completely different manufacturing method

[-] kalleboo@lemmy.world 73 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

Microsoft's thing takes a screenshot of everything on your screen and saves and indexes it. Opened up your password manager and revealed a password? Saved. Opened a porn site in a private tab in any browser aside from Edge? Saved. Opened up a private encrypted chat to try to get away from your abusive partner/parents? Saved and indexed. Logged into a portal at work showing HIPAA information? Saved and indexed.

Apple's thing is basically a better search feature of all the data you already have saved, that apps have already opted-in to sharing. It runs on device, and Apple has promised they do not send the data back to train the models. They also have some generic ChatGPT-like tool to help rewrite your documents, but that's 100% opt-in so nobody really cares about it, it's easy to just not use.

[-] kalleboo@lemmy.world 29 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago)
[-] kalleboo@lemmy.world 33 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

"RDOF rules set speeds of 25/3 Mbps as the minimum allowed for broadband service delivered by winners. However, participants were permitted to bid at four different performance tiers: 25/3 Mbps, 50/5 Mbps, 100/20 Mbps and 1 Gbps/500 Mbps"

If SpaceX had bid on a lower tier of service that they were actually capable of delivering, they would have been fine.

This grant was not designed to fund the development of new technology, it was designed to build infrastructure (fiber, 5G, WISPs, etc) and they were originally going to exclude satellites from the bidding completely. The companies who would have used the grant to build fiber or set up point-to-point wireless would have had no problem meeting the requirements since it's all proven technology.

[-] kalleboo@lemmy.world 60 points 1 year ago

Neat - these things usually show up in the news as a render and then you never hear about it again. Being actually built full-scale is pretty cool.

Sails obviously work, the two questions with an automated metal sail for cargo ships are cost and reliability. Making moving parts that don't break down in high wind and salt water isn't easy.

[-] kalleboo@lemmy.world 30 points 1 year ago

I think this is an apt analogy in more ways than one!

Older cars, you really did have to keep messing with them to keep them running and if you had to go to the mechanic every time, it would be too expensive, so it was almost a necessity. Just like with computers 2 decades ago.

These days you hear of people who drive a Honda for 100,000 miles without even changing the oil once and it just keeps running somehow. Why bother learning to fix something like that?

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kalleboo

joined 1 year ago