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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/)KA
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  • First of all: Sorry, I made a mistake yesterday. I ment to say liquid but translated it wrong in my head

    Now to your question, they are similar in some aspects, that's what makes gasses and liquids both be considered fluids, so fluid dynamics apply to both for example.

    The difference is how much the molecules in the liquid or gas interact: A lot in the liquid, not significantly in most gasses under standard conditions.

    And the things is, the SLPM measure apparently relies on a characteristic of ideal gasses, that one mol of gas particles under standard conditions always takes a fixed volume 22.41 l. So now I'm confused why they would use it for hydraulic fluid, which sounds like a liquid to me.

  • Thanks, you succeeded hahaha.

    From what I'm reading there this is a measure of mass flow rate of gas, expressed as volume per minute at some standard volume and pressure. Which makes some sense, you need those two parameters to be fixed so you can measure mass by volume.

    And then I realized the OP article uses it for a fluid liquid 😂

  • That car racing guy who hit his head on a rock while skiing and is in a coma

    That guy lives in Switzerland, passed by his land once. But what the fuck was his name again. Ah, Michael Schumacher!

  • You're right that there are many drivers and people from manufacturers responsible for hardware families, but there still needs to be a maintainer for the subsystem as a whole.

    That person reviews what the manufacturers and other contributors send in, to validate that things are still compatible where they touch in the kernel, and that the code is good enough. They then prep the commits of the subsystem for inclusion into the next kernel version and pass that to Linus, is my understanding.

  • Ah I'm glad to see the situation seems to have cooled a little.

    See this comment and the three following, as well as this one and the two following. I think they can now work it out between the projects reasonably.

    PS: This more fundamental proposal for Fedora Workstation that started from the OBS packaging issue is also interesting to read. It seems they are looking to make more limited / focused use of their own Flatpak remote in the future since some old assumptions regarding Flatpaks and Flathub don't hold so well anymore.

  • I mean sure, we could talk about Google's motivations, I'm not a fan of their sycophancy either.

    But I don't think it matters. In a civil suit first of all President Sheinbaum would have to assert a tort against Google, and for that you need to demonstrate you were damaged due to anothers wrongdoing or at least negligence.

    So yes, it actually is about the harm. And if that is given, then they still have to argue, that it was wrongful or at least negligent to add the "sensitive country" name of the area to Google Maps. But I don't think there are any laws that restrict Google or any other private mappers to using any source of information in particular, so that will be hard.

    Of course they are morally bankrupt, but legally I just don't see anything significant happening.

    And in the meantime the executive order had the intended effect of making the U.S. Board on Georgraphic Names change the name in their systems, so Google can use that as a fig leaf too

  • I'm not suggesting she should kiss ass, far be it from me. But I still don't see a good motive for this move. A civil suit is not going to get her anything, she's just highlighting Trumps symbolic bullshit even more.

    And then when the suit either goes against her or goes for her but results in laughibly low compensation because the measureable harm is not significant, then it will look like a confirmation of the power of the convict in chief.