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2 yr. ago

  • That's true. Personally though, it not being optional for any amount of time just shows that there's no good argument to have it be mandatory in the first place.

  • Yup. I've always loved having a handheld device as a companion to my PC. The first few months with the Switch were great, but as time went on I just wanted a better designed Switch that's also just a PC, particularly after getting hardware-banned for trying to fix some of the issues myself with homebrew apps.

    I never would've thought that we'd actually get to see a device that's real so quickly (anyone remember the Smach Z?), is actually pretty good and how quickly it's now becoming its own market segment.

  • Oh yeah, I kind of skipped over that, but I actually meant that more flexible consumption helps bring down baseload demand, and in turn the need for backup generation as well once we reach that point where that matters.

    Really good explanation of the issue though. Personally, I'm a bit more optimistic about being able to be more flexible demand. Particularly EVs and heat pumps are two areas where a smart grid can help shape demand without even being noticed by the people (apart from cheaper tariffs) as long as the car is fully charged in the morning and the room temperature is maintained.

  • The entire point of the nuclear is so that it can take the base load

    The idea to cover baseload demand with its own baseload power generation is an outdated concept though from a time when demand was inflexible and generation could be controlled to fit. Now that generation is dynamic, having baseload power generation is the opposite of what's needed. We need flexible backup generation and more flexible demand to bring down baseload demand.

  • We also shouldn't just focus on generation, but also on consumption. If we had a smarter grid that could shift demand to fit the dynamic power generation of renewables better, that should reduce the required capacity for backup power generation quite a bit.

  • Don't worry. There's still plenty of ESP32 waiting to be flashed with ESPHome and placed into their own little enclosure out there.

    Source: Me, who's got a Bluetooth Proxy for my adjustable desk and some small LED strips running, with a soil moisture sensor planned as my next quick project.

  • I use the CLI because it's keyboard-focused (though I use lots of mouse-enabled TUIs) and because it's programmable.

    Generally though, I kind of get what you're trying to say, but 'uniformity' feels like an unfortunate choice in the context of your question, as the meaning can be very arbitrarily defined, hence the confusion. I could, for example, claim that GUIs are more uniform because all chat apps, browsers etc... are so similar to each other that once I've learned one I can use all.

    Which is why It'd probably be better if you tried to reword your initial question avoiding that term, focussing more on describing the desired benefits of your definition of uniformity.

    Otherwise I'd point towards voice recognition, as that's very similar to a CLI, but probably not what you had in mind, I'm guessing?

  • Even as a heavy user of CLIs, claiming that their text-only nature somehow makes them more uniform, feels a bit overly reductive to me:

    To start with, there's simple fire-and-return commands, interactive commands, full-blown TUIs and so on. Then there's the parameters, which aren't really consistent either across applications either. Neither in the naming of arguments, nor their grammar. The representation of the output is also all over the place.

    With all those things, it's really not so dissimilar from the different layouts of GUIs. Not to mention that there's also lots of CLI tools that do the same thing but have a different interface, so yeah.

  • Unlike the article suggests, I really hope that the option "only vibrate when unlocked" means that it doesn't play a notification sound when the phone is unlocked. Also that it'll be enabled by default.

    So annoying to hear tons of notification sound from a person who's actively chatting, holding the phone in their hands, making the sound completely pointless.

  • These days, knowing some people, I'm already grateful if a person is just using the default notification sound. Two highlights:

    1. Camera flash light.alongside the notification, so you get a free flashbang whenever you're sitting across from that person. I've yet to figure out how that mode is even helpful in any way and not just an annoyance for other people.
    2. Long music clips not as a ringtone, but as a notification on full blast. Essentially, that person has trained themself to drop everything when a notification comes in in order to shut down the music. I'm not an expert, but that feels like the opposite of healthy phone usage.
  • It's one of the very few things Microsoft actually gets right on their websites. You select to log in with a passkey, authenticate, optionally select which account you want to use, and you're signed in. Not a single username or password entered into the website.

  • That whole industry can cease to exist from one day to the next and nothing of value would be lost - if anything value would be gained for the average person

    That last point can't be stressed enough. The whole marketing sector is essentially a net negative to society because neither an actual product gets produced nor any useful service is offered.

  • They've basically perfected keeping the community mostly happy by toeing the line between putting out solid base games and putting out greedy DLC.

    What we're now seeing is what happens when you don't immediately change course after you skimp on making a good base game.

  • Only sort of related, but it's kind of insane how many different phones Samsung releases. Checking GSMArena, they've apparently released an average of two phones per month over the last year.

    Seems a bit overkill to me.

  • Even the PC manufacturers selling "gaming" PCs using integrated graphics aren't usually this brazen about it.

  • Yup, at the very minimum let me continue to play TFT. You can't really cheat there, and if you could, that's more likely due to an underlying gamplay/UX problem.

  • I have a Onyx Boox Nova C that has pretty much the same technology (Kaleido Plus) and would say that the color display is mostly just a neat gimmick that comes with some tradeoffs. Compared to a pure monochrome E-Ink display the contrast is much worse and colors don't really pop either. You basically always need at least a bit off background lighting to be able to read.

    I'd recommend these types of display only if being able to read without background lighting isn't a must and even then only for stuff that's better with color, like notes, technical books or the occasional colored page in a book/manga. If you want to read something reliant on stunning colorful artwork like graphic novels I'd stay away.

  • As long as that applies to all browsers equally. I don't know the current state of things but if I remember correctly, Firefox already circumvented the earlier default protection method, because Microsoft made it so that their own Edge browser didn't require those extra steps that were forced upon all other browsers.

  • AFAIK MusicBee isn't open source, just Freeware. Which is fair enough if the dev doesn't want to, but also a bit frustrating personally, as people could've improved Linux support considerably if it was.

  • Imagine a "Choose your Browser"-style pop-up, but for your OS on first boot. I'd really love to see it, partially mostly for the amount of pure chaos it would cause.