I went with a Sony 1V. It processes the images a lot more like a regular camera, so more natural but also less 'flashy' by default. If you take a boring picture, it's going to look boring. But I just like that high-contrast, natural colors, 'real camera' look so much better than the always-on-hdr, artificial, tacky look of many modern smartphone cameras.
Amazing hardware, but I was really disappointed with the way the 13 pro processed pictures. I ultimately went with a completely different brand after being really hyped for the 1" sensor. The 13 ultra came with some minor improvements, at least that was my impression, but still wouldn't have been an option for me. I'm really interested in what they're doing with this newest iteration.
We do in Germany, every two years. It's not helping and I don't know why. Maybe people are aligning their headlights correctly just for the test. Or the test is garbage. Next time my car is due, I'll ask the guy.
Careful what you wish for Donnie...
Die übertragen Bilharziose.
Bilharziose.
The term 'SUV' is also used a bit differently in Europe, they usually include smaller vehicles like crossovers.
When you play the game of thrones, you win or you die.
I had high hopes for the current government, but I never imagined the FDP would be able to do so much damage with so few votes. The way it is now, I'm pretty disappointed. A lot of great ideas that were just shut down in their infancy.
I only know the situation in Germany, but it's likely similar. Consent is not the bottleneck. The number of organs that cannot be donated because consent is either unclear or not given at all is pretty small, even though a lot of people aren't registered organ donors. Usually the next of kin are asked what the donor might have wanted and in the majority of cases, they agree with a donation.
Making donations mandatory would have a very minor effect.
The true bottleneck is that a very specific condition is needed in order to make organ donation possible. The donor has to be dead because you can't take vital organs from a living person. But at the same time, their heart still has to be beating in order to keep the organs supplied with oxygen until they can be removed.
The only way this is possible is when the brain is dead but the heart and other organs still function with medical assistance. A person without a working brain is considered dead by law. This only happens with very serious brain injury, major strokes or similar incidents. And with improving treatment options, a lot of people who would have ended up brain dead a few decades ago, can now survive with varying neurological outcomes.
If you want a lot more organ donors, ban helmets. Otherwise, there are no simple solutions.
No need for a DAC, USB-C can transmit analog audio signal, it's part of the standard.
Ja, ich habe auch den Eindruck dass "konservativ" nur noch ein Euphemismus für unmenschliche und ungerechte Politik ist, die überhaupt nichts mehr "bewahren" will.