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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)EX
Posts
8
Comments
757
Joined
1 yr. ago

  • Until Tesla allows other shops to do repairs, those swastikars will never be economical even if you ignore the Nazi part

    Everything on them can be fixed by a regular mechanic, and Tesla isn't stopping it (at least not in Europe). People are getting 3rd party special shops to fix HV batteries and motors on old model S without any issues. Brakes, suspension, steering, LV electrical (windows, lights, handles etc.), AC can be fixed by anyone without issues. And aside from body parts and a few specialty components (their "octovalve" comes to mind), it's mostly standard auto components that can be bought from 3rd party manufacturers without giving Tesla any money.

    Edit: a model 3/Y door handle is around $100, of course still expensive but also far below your $1000 example, and on par with an original handle for my old ass Peugeot 308.

  • I'm not yucking in their yum though, I'm clarifying why I have the opinion I have, because they said they were curious. The yucking is entirely your projections, I even start the response by stating it's my opinion and not objective truth.

  • Yeah I don't think TUIs are a great way to interface with most things. It's a needlessly outdated method and provides an unnecessary barrier to less technically inclined people, and when a GUI interface is present anyways it just kind of dumb. TUIs are slower to execute things with than GUI 99% of the time, and always less intuitive.

    I hate this ridiculous nerd trope of loving TUIs, it's getting old and over used.

  • I prefer adguard home, much better UI and updating it is easier...at least compared to last time I tried where i had to SSH in to the pi-hole to update it since it didn't allow it through the web interface like adguard home does. Not a big issue, but still a little annoying compared to just doing it from the web interface.

  • It still doesnt expand beyond the fixed width of the section column it's created in. And a card cannot span multiple columns, it's always locked to a single column. You also can't control left/right position of columns, it only starts from centre if the page and expands from there.

  • That seems to be incorrect, I just tried and it forces the use of their titles and badges spanning entire width and only at the top with, sections forced into columns underneath. There is no way to make a card span e.g. 2/3 of the width with the last 1/3 used by another card. I also can't make a full width section below other sections, it forces columns that fixes to screen centre if it doesn't fill the whole screen, I can't even make it stay to the left or right of the screen.

    Yeah I can drag cards between sections, but I cant control sizes or location of anything, its still locked in to their very limited idea of dash board layouts.

  • Hopefully, the company can send out a server-side fix in short order.

    The Chromecast (2nd gen) and Chromecast Audio are two of Google’s oldest devices, with both announced at the same event in September of 2015.

    Yeah those are likely considered dead and abandoned by google, they will probably not give a shit about it.

  • I haven't been able to freely move cards, or easily expand beyond the defined column with newest version. It shouldn't be a technical issue, it's possible for many other applications to manage this flawlessly.

  • The constraints of only being able to make cards in predefined columns and positions is absolutely ridiculous. We should be able to drag-n-drop and resize to whatever size cards we want. It's a huge PITA to make anything that doesn't follow this incredibly restricted way of thinking.