If it's not connected to a network(or connected to one without internet access), the data never leaves the TV though, and then the tracking doesn't really matter.
Its breaking a shitload og stuff on Firefox right now...I can't reliably use my home assistant interface with it enabled, onshape won't load CAD models and I can't use drop-down menus on a lot of sites.
I don't know what the hell they did, but it's breaking everything.
I'm not the other user, but this is my NUC running proxmox with 2 VMs and 2 LXCs. Running with an old i3, 16gb ram and a single 1tb NVME, no mechanical HDDs, and a few USB peripherals like a ZigBee dongle.
People replace them that often!? Damn...I have an old 1080p LED tv from Samsung that's more than a decade old and still going strong. Blacks aren't the best on it, but not bad enough to warrant an upgrade.
But you don't need blockchain to solve the issue with the push for subscription business models, it actually has zero impact on whether or not companies want to use that model. I can buy a digital file (providing someone is selling it of course) without blockchain, it's mine without blockchain, and I can use it however I want without blockchain, I can sell it without blockchain...so why would I need blockchain for this scenario? It doesn't provide a solution to a problem.
Companies will push for subscription models because they love that recurrent revenue and lock-in of the userbase it provides.
blockchain isn't going to stop them from having this preference.
I've had bad stringing before with PLA, drying it made it go away completely with the exact same print settings and model.
I'd argue that the vast amount of (recent, not only older) resources available online showing similar experiences to mine disproves your statement that PLA has no issues with moisture retention.
Well, if the average American views 7/10 as the average on a 1-10 scale, it really just proves that their view is skewed, objectively incorrect, and cannot be used as a useful measure in this. Being wrong in multiple (and completely unrelated) instances does not make any of them correct.
50F (or 40-60F) is not the most comfortable for...well, anyone i think. Thats pretty chilly for most people, with 60F being the low side of comfortable (both inside and outside). Most universally comfortable temperature range is probably around 70-80F, which is not really "around the middle" in that 0-100 range. 70F is ideal inside temperature, 80F is a nice warm summer day outside.
That's absolutely insane...why is it not a requirement to have audits performed by a third party, or the FAA themselves? This is laughably ridiculous, especially for an industry that claims to be focused on safety and quality.
Are these facilities not regularly audited by a 3rd party to maintain their ISO certifications? The stuff mentioned in the article (key card feeler gauge...WTF!?) would/should have been caught in any routine audit.
Just because I am capable of doing those things does not mean I should.
This is the crux of why so many companies, especially smaller and medium sized ones, are a hot mess. capable of << good at, but of course it's cheaper to just get johnny to do everything.
US cell service plans always seem insanely priced compared to what we're used to here in Europe. They pay a fortune for shitty plans with low data caps, it's ridiculous.
AC also keeps the car warm you know...and yes, I tell it to keep my car at 21°C and it does just that. Its a Peugeot 308, medium trim level, that's more than a decade old with +250k km on it, I'm not driving a nice new car at all. My wife's VW up is exactly the same, also not new and definitely not a "nice" car.
If it's not connected to a network(or connected to one without internet access), the data never leaves the TV though, and then the tracking doesn't really matter.