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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/)RA
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2 yr. ago

  • All of that points are valid questions to be solved for an implementation. I want to add another one: Which part of the users profit from this?

    Most users don't give a fuck which browser they use as long as it's working. They cannot comprehend most information you described in your questions and want a simple solution. The other part of users usually knows how to install and select a browser of their choice on a PC. After all it's not that hard with the current OS choices available anyway.

  • A great series is the german "Tatortreiniger" which translates to something like "crime scene cleaner". I'd describe it as a small scale theatre like series, each episode playing inside a house or a few rooms, with a few characters. The main character usually has to clean up a crime scene and is confronted with the other residents of the building. It has a special kind of humor, mostly transported by really strange everyday situations.

  • The products are probably not bad on purpose, but the use of addictive substances or replacing costly (good) with cheap alternatives, is a great way to reduce production costs and to increase sales.

    Reduce vegetable components, increase sugar and salt. Fill up with water, adjust viscosity. Similar taste, much cheaper, more addictive and worse for your body.

  • There are different dimensions for this, balance of importance differs between users and application:

    • data transfer rate
    • power transfer rate
    • durability
    • reusability with other products
    • length
    • price
    • someone made it white and engraved a pictogram of an incomplete apple on it
  • I support that point of view, but you also have to compare their performance to human drivers. We often have the expectation that technology have to be perfect (which it isn't). Since you also have an IT background you know this pretty well probably. But if it's safer than human drivers it could as well be an improvement.

  • Same for me. Time spend getting to work is basically also work time, which is usually not paid.

    For a "fun" experiment just calculate how many hours you are on the way to work every year:

    daily_travel_minutes * days_on_site / 60

    Divide this by 8 to see how many holidays you get by switching to a fully/mostly remote job.

  • People will do everything that givesthem an advantage in anykind of way. If coal is an affordable resource to fulfill a need it will be mined and put to use.

    You may change the view on a thing for a few persons, but never of all of them.