The ramen museum is fun, highly recommend if in the area. As for its ethics, I think the ethics of the work culture in Japan can be talked about, but I don't know how the shops in that particular museum operate.
although it uses your biometric data, it's still a single factor of authentication
Speaking from my experience, I use my phone for biometric authentication. At least from my point of view, I see that as two factors (what I have and what I am) since the biometric authentication only works on my phone.
I am not sure I understood you here. What do you mean by "instead of having each service do their own thing"? Each website using their own method of delivering OTPs?
Basically having multiple places where codes may be generated. This way you can use one location to get OTPs instead of having them delivered via SMS or generated by a different app/service. It ends up being easier and more convenient for the end user (which of course increases adoption).
I guess this has more to do with services adopting OTP generators than sending them via SMS though.
From the perspective of OTPs it makes much more sense to use a separate application (Like Google Authenticator or Aegis Authenticator), preferably on a separate device, to generate the OTPs.
If logging into the password manager to get the password is sufficiently secure (locked behind MFA), then I don't see the benefit of using a separate OTP generator (aside from maybe if your password manager has a data breach or something, which should be a non-issue except it clearly isn't thanks to LastPass...)
I'm starting to wonder if phones (or other auth-specific devices) should just become dedicated authentication devices and passwords should just be phased out entirely tbh. Passwords have always had issues because their static nature means if someone learns your password without your knowledge, that method of authentication becomes worthless. The main concern would be what happens when you lose your phone I suppose.
Many password managers use a biometric factor to sign in (your fingerprint, for example, using some kind of auth app if needed). This basically moves the MFA aspect to one service (your password manager) instead of having each service do their own thing. It also comes with the benefits of password managers - each password can be unique, high entropy, and locked behind MFA.
I think that depends on His nationality and where the works were created. Does the US respect copyright claimed in countries that no longer exist (at least in the same form)?
I've honestly always found "allowlist" and "blocklist" to feel like forced compound words, and I don't see why "list" is necessary at all. For example, just saying "allowed" and "blocked" both implies it's a list and is more intuitive than any of the *list terms.
Personally I have no stake in the battle, but I do wish people would use the most intuitive terms for the situation at least (whatever they are, for example "enabled"/"disabled" or "included"/"excluded") instead of blanket ctrl+f on everything.
There are a disproportionately large number of people who get one pretty demo and think LLMs are the solution to everything. Even for translations, I'd be interested to see how accurate the major models are in real world scenarios. We've been struggling hard to find any practical usage of LLMs that doesn't require the user to be able to verify the output themselves.
Same. Unlike the Ally, if you already have this mainboard from buying a laptop and want to upgrade the mainboard later, the cost of the mainboard is essentially 0 since it's just a component being EOL'd at that point. Better in a handheld for its final days rather than as e-waste.
Framework is also releasing their GPU modules. Hopefully someone finds a way to make that work with a handheld as well, although the form factor of the module might not be handheld-friendly.
The logo is useful for data transfer, but for power delivery you can usually find the outputs on the adapter. For example, my 65W USB-C charging cable supports 3A at 5V/9V/15V and 3.25A at 20V. It's not very consumer friendly, sure, but at least it's simple (higher is "better").
I agree, open source devs don't owe anyone anything (unless they're accepting commissions or something). Also, generally speaking, being a good developer does not translate to being a good community moderator. There should be no expectation of the latter.
I had no expectations going in (wasn't planning to play it) and came out having fun. I don't know what expectations you or anyone else had, but maybe those expectations are what ruined the game. I don't think anyone's claiming the game is perfect (anyone who is probably is trolling), but it's pretty dismissive of its strengths for people to say it's unplayable (unless you legit can't run it, which is fair). If all you focus on is what the game doesn't do well, then you might as well only ever play perfect masterpieces because all other games will be a disappointment. If the price is a concern, it will probably go on sale eventually anyway, assuming you don't find alternatives before then.
I do think there are a lot of flaws with the game, but those flaws have already been elaborated in great depth by others. Despite those flaws, game is still fun and has a lot of room for mods to come in and make it better.
The whole green vs blue bubble thing has to be the most idiotic debate I've ever seen in my life. At least here people seem to be comparing real features, but still just buy whatever has what you want. Especially when iPhone 15 comes out with USB-C charging.
Government is bad and we should have less of it in our faces. To achieve this goal, let's make the consumption of certain popular drugs illegal, and while we're at it make laws restricting what women, trans, gay, etc people can do. This should reduce the government's involvement in our day-to-day lives.
I just don't understand it. Less government = good (according to practically every republican I've met), so lets vote for more laws which restrict people and give the government more power.
I don't think there's anything wrong with using HTML/XML-ish format for describing a UI (although having a standardized presentation format that all "viewers/browsers" follow exactly the same way would be nice), I'm just sad that websites have become described as UIs rather than as well-structured documents.
I wish languages were more willing to release breaking versions, like a C++ v2 or such. That's not to say languages don't already have breaking changes between versions (Python comes to mind), but it would allow people to start fresh and clean up obsolete designs and libraries.
The ramen museum is fun, highly recommend if in the area. As for its ethics, I think the ethics of the work culture in Japan can be talked about, but I don't know how the shops in that particular museum operate.