mle

@mle@feddit.de
0 Post – 9 Comments
Joined 1 years ago

For some great irony check out this wan show segment where linus talks about how he doesn't like that a prototype (backpack) of theirs ended up in the hands of the public https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EwgZaSYuBLc&t=3209 Time 53:29, in case the timestamped link doesn't work

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This headline had me guessing wether it's about the US or some middle east state

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Wouldn't the "no postage required" business reply label link to the original mailing anyway, i.e. clould that not be linked to your address?

Stargate SG-1

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I'm no expert on inspecting bridges, but I'd think that you still would need a professional inspector to do the inspecting, only that they would save the time of actually travelling out to the bridge themselves and instead could do it in their office, no?

And then there are probably things which still need to be done on site, such as non-visual inspections (ultrasound, X-Ray, Vibration testing, Tourque measuring on bolts, paint thickness,...? IDK)

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Green Hat Enterprise Linux

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I'd happily pay for the content on youtube, if the user experience was not as miserable as it is.

Search is basically non functional, sort by oldest is gone, search in channel is only available on desktip not on mobile, filter videos by date range is not possible, video quality is mediocre, everyone and their dog makes titles that leave no clue at all about ehats actually in the video because "they do better for the algorithm", if you want to actually read the comments or video thescription on mobile you'll have to click "shoe more" and "expand" until your finger hurts, video caches only a few seconds ahead, which makes watching on flaky connections miserable, video quality defaults to 480p even on gigabit internet, etc., etc., etc.

If they would actually care about the user experience, I'd pay. Instead they just make the ads as annoying as possible, in the hopes that users pay just to get rid of the annoance, instead of paying for an actually good service.

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Yes, but it is very quick and cheap to get a domain validated cert from a CA that is generally trusted by most web browsers, so once the bad actor has the domain, the should be able to trick most users, only maybe certificate pinning might help, but that is not widely used.

Also, you can probably convert feet, inches, miles to yards, and one yard is 0.9144 meters, so for rough estimates 1yard = 1 meter, then take 10% off