Is this news? In the early 2000s I couldn't stand working with 60Hz monitors, there was noticeable flicker. Setting them to 72Hz was a definite improvement.
About 90 percent of my coworkers were like, "Why are you fiddling with the display settings? Flicker? Wot flicker?"
They are supposed to be the glue that binds the internal team together as well as bonding to external groups.
The project manager organises external requirements and steers the project in the direction needed for the business. That direction might change depending on the status of other projects, it's their job to be on top of that.
They also report progress and roadblocks upstream so that those who manage groups of related projects can work on keeping everything running.
Whether they're actually competent, well that's something else entirely.
not only claim the right but also apparently claim ownership of any content you publish there, while providing no consideration (payment) in return.
That's not entirely true.
The payment is hosting your content for free on their servers that provide reasonable uptime and unlimited retention. You can choose to carve out your own place on the internet and post your content on your own hosting if you want, but a lot of people choose Reddit, or Facebook, or Instagram, or Snapchat, because the tradeoff is agreeable.
You might be the only user, but there are processes running on your machine that are not you. Most system processes try to run with the least permissions possible to mitigate security risks.
It feels like it's this kind of problem, but it could also be something to do with file locking. Eg the transfer process wants to rename the file but it can't because another process has it open.
I can read and skim documents for salient details at 500 - 800 words per minute.
And then someone links me to a twelve minute video on YouTube where 800 words are spoken in total , 300 of those words are "um,so", and all we're looking at is either the narrator , or possibly a static slide with a few paragraphs on it... and also an inset of the narrator, narrating.
It sounds like your sync process can create files, but not rename them afterwards.
That long filename you've got now is likely the temporary name you get while the file is being transferred, once it's fully there it usually gets renamed to what you want it to be.
Go up one level and check the permissions for the directory the files are in. The permissions should be read-write, otherwise it'd not be able to create files in there at all, but check if the "sticky bit" is set. That stops processes from renaming files once they are made.
Unfortunately I'm travelling at the moment, but hopefully your file manager will have a way of showing if the "sticky bit" is set for that directory.
Make laws that give consumers mandatory, irrevocable warranties that include fit-for-purpose clauses, and has phrasing such as "reasonable expected lifetime" for the goods. Make those laws apply to whoever sells you the goods, not the manufacturer.
Laws like that weed out a lot of crap. Shops won't buy crap in because they have to deal with the warranty on said crap. Manufacturers won't make (as much) crap because they have to deal with returns.
You won't be able to buy a $4 air fryer any more, but the one you do buy will last a lot longer.
Edit: I'm Australian, and we have consumer rights over and above warranties offered by manufacturers. Those rights would be a good start.
This appears to be more the angle of the person being fed an endless stream of hate on social media and thus becoming radicalised.
What causes them to be fed an endless stream of hate? Algorithms. Who provides those algorithms? Social media companies. Why do they do this? To maintain engagement with their sites so they can make money via advertising.
And so here we are, with sites that see you viewed 65 percent of a stream showing an angry mob, therefore you would like to see more angry mobs in your feed. Is it any wonder that shit like this happens?
Heavy debian testing / unstable user for over a decade here. I have never had to worry about doing 1/2/3 and I let my package manager do whatever it wants whenever it wants.
Yeah - personally I don't mind it this way. To me, "Deleted by creator" is simply something more along the lines of, "I'd like to retract my previous statement".
Sometimes I get curious and reply to a deleted comment to see what they said, but generally I let it slide.
I use boost as it shows deleted comments as "deleted by creator", but you can reply to deleted comments and when you do you can see and quote it
Just like I have now. So what I assume is happening is that the backend just marks the comment as deleted and leaves everything in place, and it's up to the front end to handle that.
Is this news? In the early 2000s I couldn't stand working with 60Hz monitors, there was noticeable flicker. Setting them to 72Hz was a definite improvement.
About 90 percent of my coworkers were like, "Why are you fiddling with the display settings? Flicker? Wot flicker?"