Believing with you that religion is a matter which lies solely between Man & his God, that he owes account to none other for his faith or his worship, that the legitimate powers of government reach actions only, & not opinions, I contemplate with sovereign reverence that act of the whole American people which declared that their legislature should "make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof," thus building a wall of separation between Church & State. Adhering to this expression of the supreme will of the nation in behalf of the rights of conscience, I shall see with sincere satisfaction the progress of those sentiments which tend to restore to man all his natural rights, convinced he has no natural right in opposition to his social duties.
NU7400 has a peak of 337 nits and that's with the poorer contrast ratio of LCD. My LG C1 is 780 nits. I still find it a bit weak with the lights on so I can't imagine 330 on LCD.
Yeah, HDR is meant to be watched in a 5-nit environment, but sometimes that's just not reasonable. While my LG is technically better, bright TV shows like Rings of Power are more enjoyable with the 1500 nits my TCL can output. Once that ABL (Automatic Brightness Limiter) kicks in for the OLED, you absolutely need the blackout curtains.
an 85" TCL R655 with a bunch of dimming zones that works great in my sunlight-heavy living room for both daytime viewing and family movie night.
a 55" LG C1 in my gaming/home-office/theater room with blackout curtains that is great for PC gaming and awesome theater experience.
I would say it depends on your viewing environment. The inability of an OLED to get bright can ruin the experience. But my game room has blackout curtains and it's enclosed.
I just recently moved from 34" Ultrawide to just mounting the 55" onto my desk. It's oversized for my viewing distance, but 4K resolution is 8million pixels so I rarely run apps in or near fullscreen anymore. I think a 42" LG OLED is perfect for PC. (Great out of the box calibration and 120hz G-Sync). Though QD-OLED on Samsung are technically better, I don't trust them to run compensation cycles.
If you're worried about burn-in on PC, just set a screensaver to black your screen in 2 to 5 minutes. That's why they were invented anyway (CRT era). For regular media consumption it's a non-issue. Rtings set a static image for 120 hours on a Sony OLED and it basically went away with one compensation cycle.
The TL;DR is now pixels get tracked for how long they've been lit. Then the device can evenly burn out the other pixels so the usage is uniform. The trade off is you are going to lose max brightness in the name of screen uniformity.
The other point is a shifting of the TFT layer that people think is burn-in, but it's actually image retention. But, it is solved by these TV maintenance cycles. Just hope that this compensation cycle actually runs since some panels just fail to run them.
Checkout this RTings video for a good overview of lots of different TV brands and how they perform.
PS: Burn-in is actually a misnomer from the CRT era. There's nothing burning in; the pixels are burning (wearing) out.
It's more because they'll let you pay for the phone in two years with 0% APR, but you can't just leave, not pay, and use the phone on another provider.
Before it used to be free or heavily discounted, but now it's just a 0% APR credit service.
Not get off, but used basically as a temporary insanity plea to get a reduced sentence. It's basically an admission of guilt to request a lower charge. And yes, the Wiki article cites numerous examples, the most famous one being the guy who killed somebody after finding out on a talk show his friend was gay and has a crush on him. He used the defense and got 2nd-degree murder instead of 1st.
Mostly because it's not sourced from, or meant to be, weekly episodic content. It's from a set of space opera novels, so the animated version is like when people adapt Game of Thrones. It's also technically not an Anime, but an OVA.
There's nothing really cringe about it. Just good story in an animated format.
You're mostly right, if not completely right. VPN is encrypted with SSL so the ISPs only see that you exchanged information with a VPN, but not what is being exchanged.
You may consider that maybe the ISPs can also figure out who else connects to the VPN and maybe deduce some information that way, but they can't know everyone who uses the VPN, only those on their ISP that use it. So you can exchange information with somebody in Antarctica and the ISP has no way of knowing if it's somebody outside or inside their ISP.
Also, on the point of services that are not HTTPS, don't confuse encrypted protocols with the SSL of the VPN. Your ISP will not see your unencrypted packets either if you tunnel it through your VPN. They can't see your DNS or ping requests (assuming you are using an IP based proxy, not using a SOCKS proxy). But your VPN provider can see those unencrypted requests. So you're choosing to trust the VPN provider with those opaque requests over your ISP.
And last, about DNS-over-HTTP, a reverse DNS is enough for your ISP to know what domain you're connecting to in a lot of the cases, regardless if you hide the domain name resolution. Of course, sites using shared CDNs mitigate this, but not all do.
Champions of Norrath has ruined every single isometric RPG for me.
Baldur's Gate 3 is meh to me. I acknowledge it's technical, narrative, and gameplay achievements. I can't get into it.
My backstory was the game is good and gameplay is immediately in your control. No rolling of dice, no pauses between moves. Just loot, aim, and kill. Hack/slash at its finest.
Nope. I have my Pixel 7 on Android 13 and my Pixel 8 on Android 14.
The only difference is when you activate on Android 13, you get notification it's connecting and it's connected. Neither are permanent, and I can dismiss them.
Android 14 has no notification and just shows you on the app it's connected now (different UI).
It never had a persistent notification, so I'd reason the author was misinformed or misunderstood the change when somebody told them.
That is for applications that need access to a LOCAL_SERVICE while not in foreground. That's like Geolocation or screen orientation. VPN is not one of those. You can kill the foreground application from the recent apps by sliding up.
No real VPN app needs to have an application window and a background service (same thread) running to provide a VPN. If it does, it is doing something else not related to VPN.
If you want to add a pause button, applications can add custom tiles.
It's a portmanteau of the lyrics "Luck be a lady tonight" and "I can feel it calling in the air tonight" which is why it feels just familiar enough to seem real, but not actually.
Proper quote:
(From your snopes link)