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2 yr. ago

  • They actually did open up the PDF, believe it or not. The standard is currently controlled by ISO, and has been since 2008.

    The problem is that PDF is such a shitty format that no one but Adobe really wants to bother trying to work with it. That, and Adobe still owns a lot of the patents for "shit you can do to a PDF" so everyone else has to engineer their own solutions to get around that if they don't want to pay to license.

  • VR has the extra element of needing a suitable living space to play in, though. Other games I can do at my desk or in my tiny, cramped living room, but I have nowhere I can easily set up for VR that would allow for significant range of motion.

    I own a VR headset, but I only really use it for games that allow you to be stationary and just use the headset as an immersive monitor with a standard controller. As one would expect, it doesn't get much use, because not many VR games are made to play that way!

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  • Same thoughts here.

    Without fear of opposition becoming dominant, the ruling powers that be are not incentivised to placate the masses, and instead consolidate power and turn to self-enrichment. Similar to what is seen in autocratic or single-party states, eventually leading to some sort of collapse or revolution when the people reach a breaking point.

    Capitalists currently control the world, and they're not going to cede any of that control voluntarily unless they have something to be afraid of.

  • Normally I'd be the one to say this is an unfairly harsh take, but when BYD is continuing the proud Chinese tradition of using slave labor to make cheaper products than the competition, I'm inclined to say that maybe they should be off the table as well.

    Maybe EVs shouldn't be as affordable until the industry is actually sustainable. I'd rather buy a vehicle made by union workers who are paid fairly for their labor, even if it's more expensive.

  • And with the global outcry against the company, I don't think that day is far off. They know there's going to be reduced demand for their products, because even those who don't feel like they want to boycott Tesla out of principle might still reconsider buying one if they don't want to deal with the shame/risk they'll get from others.

  • I hate to come across as an Apple shill, but specifically for tablets, I may reconsider them and look for an affordable used iPad somewhere. From my own experience, theirs is the only OS that is designed tablet-first and they accordingly have a larger ecosystem of apps that are tailored to that experience. I don't think you can find a more accessible tablet UX in the general consumer space.

    Windows and Android tablets are fine, but you're going to have a lot of compromises. In particular with Windows, you're either going to get the x86 OS with short battery life, or the neutered ARM version that barely anything is compatible with but gives you a few hours more per charge. Android at least is more mobile-oriented and is built for ARM by default, but it makes no real distinction between phone apps and tablet apps, so most of what you'll get is phone interfaces blown up/stretched into tablet ones. Both of these OSes are also privacy nightmares, so pick your poison there.

    There are some Linux tablets out there, too, but they've got the same core problem as Windows, where for tablet-first experiences you're looking at pretty small/specialized ecosystems unless you're up for building something yourself. Starlabs makes a tablet that you can put just about any major distro of Linux on, but it's also x86, and it ain't cheap. There is probably cheaper out there, but you're essentially getting what you pay for.

  • South Korea's government managed to successfully impeach and convict him first, though.

    Trump has been impeached twice (which is already unprecedented for an American president), but it failed both times because the bar to pass is 2/3 of the senate voting to convict, which simply cannot happen while Republicans control half or more of the senate.

  • Ah, so this is why the news this morning was randomly reporting on Abercrombie's "comeback" featuring totally real and not-at-all astroturfed Tiktokers talking about how hip the company is again while putting on makeup.

    Gotta control the narrative however they can.

  • I'm just a bit worried about any potential schism among the Democrats because the electoral system in the US is still incredibly broken and will always gravitate towards a 2-party state.

    To me, it seems easier for the Democrats to rebrand as more left-leaning than they currently are and try to remain a united front, rather than splinter into several competing parties.

    If anything is to supplant the Democratic party, it would need to be one party supplanting the whole of the Democrats, or else Republicans will remain a plurality and retain control of the US government until the electoral process changes or their numbers diminish.

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  • Depending on when in my life you ask me, "pancake" or "jianbing/zinbeng" (or just "pancake" pronounced in whatever regional accent you have because English loanwords are trendy)

  • The problem is that he still owns a huge chunk of the stock. Unless he sells it all for some reason (or dies (naturally), now that would be something), there is no way to hope that Tesla succeeds independent of Elon because he directly profits from their success.