That’s not exactly the vending machines being a solution then, is it?
That’s not exactly the vending machines being a solution then, is it?
An op? Making a misleading title? On Lemmy?
Man, it’s as if the severe lack of moderation and rules that so many people wanted when moving from Reddit is hurting the quality of posts on here.
The video showed people breaking glass displays to rob a store; how do these vending machines prevent that issue?
offload computing to the cloud (no need for a gaming PC if you can just play them online)
Unless you can live very close to one of the data centers doing the computing to minimize the number of hops, that just isn’t even remotely doable with modern networking equipment
Google tried it with stadia and gifs like this show why it doesn’t work for most people
Management of big tech are excessively rich assholes. The rich, by the very definition, do not fall into the category of “normal people”
Don’t be an asshole and blame regular people for shit like this. This is because of big tech
modify
Nope, the license forbids that.
This is source available
OSI’s definition is the oldest and original definition. It’s decades old at this point.
It’s source available, nothing more.
Just eat the kevlar silkworms
Being a Google product, I don’t expect it to have a long life span
I only recently moved to Arch and am still learning, what does the n and s flags do?
c/lemmyshitposts seems to be the Lemmy meme version of Reddit’s r/funny
I am disappointed to not see the cat become the big spoon
Remember me, Eddie?
Is the image not loading for anyone else?
The problem is that Amtrak doesn’t own most or even any of those rails, instead having to pay for the right to use them. The reason why this is a problem is that it’s hard to upgrade rails to high speed when you don’t own them. Amtrak trains also often have to stop and give passage to freight trains, which is unlike what you’d see in Japan where passenger trains are on their own, dedicated rails.
and the speed that their device operates at.
That is expecting a lot of the average consumer and is rather unreasonable to do so.
Foss advocates aren’t saying he shouldn’t be paid, just that they would like the app to be open source.
You know there is a significant difference between it being a thing you might see occasionally versus an ongoing issue?