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Wait till you find out about Nestle | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
Old trick: put an optical mouse on top of a wristwatch. The motion of the hands is enough to register, and will keep you 'active' and logged in. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
pro tip: You are probably wearing a "randomly moving platform" on your left wrist which will work great on an optical mouse. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
I use a wristwatch, but yours probably is a better idea | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
Metric-based work exist to simultaneously set a rigorous, impossible standard that cannot be met, to "maximize efficiency," while then subsequently being used to justify outsourcing. They are a means to an end. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
Oh the irony! Didn't they simulate banking activity a few years ago? | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
That would be a shitshow in Europe, as you can't evaluate performance based on monitored user activity, it's illegal.
While I bet many companies use that information, they wouldn't dare act on it with only that justification. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
> Stupid decisions like this are some "brilliant" middle managers idea and not corporate policy.
Completely false. They ALWAYS come from on high, they just won't ever ADMIT that shit. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
My manager bills this as one of the "good" things about being in the office, people can just pop over and talk to you.
Trying to explain to him that people "popping over to talk" is like top #1 thing I hate about office work makes him so confused. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
If I'm not in a meeting I'm usually in the middle of some kind of task. Y'know, doing work. Having to stop my stream of work to take a call and then get back into what I was doing before kills my productivity. Have you never been in the middle of some task that you've just felt "in the flow" with and doing good work and then bam, someone distracts you and you lose your stream of thought?
Think that, but multiple times a day because people keep fucking disturbing me because their shit is somehow more important than my actual day job. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
Yes. If you don't have very good credit some places offer a secured card that you have to give them money that you borrow off of. What ever you give them upfront becomes the limit. Basically it keeps them in the green no matter what. Although in the agreement they can turn that card into a real credit card once your credit is better and give you your money back. At that point your borrowing their money.
Not all secure cards will report to the credit bureau though. Those are more like internal credit cards. Almost like a department store card from the 90's. You don't want those. You want to build credit even if you're borrowing off your own money. So there is a silver lining.
Is it a stupid concept? Yes. Will it build your credit if you utilize it right? Also yes. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
Typically the thing "I want to do" is ALSO something my boss wants me to do, i.e my day job. If I am doing Task A and my boss calls me to talk about Task F I have to take my attention away from the work I am currently doing to talk about some other shit I might be doing later because my boss needs an update on the reports that aren't due till Friday, when my current task is due in 40 minutes. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
You've never been doing something and been distracted by someone and lost your train of thought? Or been "in the groove" work wise, feeling that things are just "clicking" in the moment and been taken away from that by some external factor?
You might be the one with the mental disability, honestly, if you find this concept so hard to comprehend. This is a really REALLY common complaint for people. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
Its the same as someone walking up to my desk to bug me with their inane shit when I'm in the middle of work. Like, if you're going to insist on forcing me into an office please make it an environment where I can work uninterrupted, thanks. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
I'm glad it worked out for you. For me it didn't matter that much since I wasn't trying to borrow money. I was only doing it to build credit. Anything I borrowed I already had the money for.
My tip for people now is put your cellphone bill on your credit card and setup automatic payments. Pay only 99% of the credit card every month. You need to have balance to show utilization. Even if you just owe $1. You'll technically pay interest on that but it will only be a couple bucks a year. If you don't want to do this then charge something that you need to pay for or it will be shut off. Like gas or electric. Bills you know you will absolutely pay because it's a necessity.
Unfortunately some companies charge you a fee to use your debit/credit card for auto payments so if might not work for everything. Another option is your vehicle gas. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
Just things that _should_ be public services, like transportation and housing. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
Yes they will dinged on this one too , but customers will survey on the new ticket where it wasn't reviewed because customers HATE that the most when they have to repeat the same questions and answers.managers don't dig deep they just look at the report by agent and fill in the box. Then nobody gets a raise anyway so none of it matters lol !! | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
According to Reddit, being in-office is a manager's sole purpose for existing with the company and want to be in office every work day | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
Was it [this](https://gifer.com/en/3RWR)? | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
Yeah I live in a country that has no central consumer credit rating. It really fucks a lot of things up, mainly access to credit - but that has a lot of downstream, real world effects for both individuals and the entire economy as a whole | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
I was about to comment how WF got me to change to a credit union 😄 | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
WF was copying Capital One.
Not only did Capital One do this extensively in the late 90s/early 00s, but they also added an extra layer of fuckery to increase revenues and mitigate risk.
Since they already knew that the average Secured Card holder is a responsibility risk, **they exploited their known vulnerabilities with auto-opt-in partner sales products associated with the payment envelope.**
Before online banking was widespread, you either made a payment over the phone or via snail mail using a pre addressed envelope sent with the bill.
**The pre addressed envelopes often had promotional offers attached.** Encyclopedia sets, cheap made watches, magazine subscriptions, and tons more.
For the vast majority of typical card holders, these offers were opt-in: if you wanted them, you had to complete the order coupon attached to the envelope and include it.
**Not Capital One...** They reversed it! If you DIDN'T want the offer, you had to say so on the tiny print coupon AND mail it back with the envelope and your payment for your bill. If you didn't? You were automatically charged for the product or service.
The majority of the calls we took during a 9 hour shift, back to back, 5 days a week, were Secured Card holders exploding at Customer Service reps because Capital One charged them for products and services they didn't want because they habitually ignored the promotional coupon on the envelope like EVERY OTHER SERVICE DID IT AT THAT TIME!
So you had people struggling to build/rebuild credit in an already exploitative way by Capital One, being further exploited for extra revenue, while also being tethered indefinitely to that low limit, largely useless card. Which also charged $25 fees for everything, daily, compounding, and often exceeding credit limits, but fees could exceed that limit.
It was typical to have one of these offers exceed a $250 limit, which triggered an over limit fee ($25), and then a another $25 for each day the account remained over the limit. Which customers wouldn't be notified of by mail until the next bill arrived, often 3 weeks of late fees later.
And we were unable to forgive those fees and subscriptions. We had to fill out a lengthy xeroxed form by hand for each report. Which wasn't entered into the account notes until it had been reviewed by an external department. Often weeks after the call.
Fuck Capital One and anyone that copied their bullshit. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
Play stupid games (measure performance via clicks) - win stupid prizes (staff gaming the metric) | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
As long as you're dept to income ratio is not more than 30% they may give you a bigger limit. It could also be based on how long you worked at a specific job and what your bills are. Is that your only credit card? Do you have a house or car payments? Many things can affect their decision. Usually they are not just trusting you. It's based on statistics. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
What...The...Fuck.gif | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
I suspect they consider it unethical when you steal from them, but not when they steal from you. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
“Why couldn’t you call an Uber. Or borrow your neighbor’s car. Or use your second car like mine. Always excuses with you Robert, never solutions.” /s | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
Yeah can't be doing that, if you hate your job find another one, don't lie about your work. I've had employees use this software, it's super obvious to catch but WF also needs to figure out why they were using it, like are their KPIs unreasonable? | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
managers are not employees and banksters are operatives | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
How’s it slavery if they’re getting paid? These are people taking a wage to do a job then fucking off while they’re supposed to be working. Guess who picks up the slack for these dickwads, other workers.
Any person who puts in a honest days work should be cheering this… no surprise some of Reddit is seething over this. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
How do you know they weren’t just fucking off on work they are suppose to be doing, leaving it for another worker to do? | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
Why? The people doing that are just making it harder on their coworkers. It’s greedy if you ask me, why do they get to get paid to fuck off while others are working? | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
How dare they not let employees steal money | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
Does a union let me get paid for faking work? What company do you own, I’d love to come “work remotely” for you. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
I know that's a joke, but they actually punished the employees who *attempted to behave ethically* during that scandal. They didn't just fire them, WF actually filed reports against them with the SEC so they couldn't find work elsewhere in the banking industry. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
I had a relatable experience. In the 2010s WF has a reputation for not playing nice with employees and their lending needs. I worked for Wells Fargo in 2010-2015. In 2012 my wife and I had our first child on the way so we decided to purchase our first home. Naturally, I applied with Wells Fargo for a home loan pre-approval. I was a licensed loan originator for them so based on our credit scores (700s) with little outstanding debt and double income household, I had an idea of how much I was expecting to get approved for. After going through the whole process they approved me for 130k (comparable to like 200k in the current economy) which I literally LOL'ed when the underwriter came back.
After that comedy show I found a locally based mortgage lender that came highly recommended. Side note, these independent lenders typically process loans then turn around and sell them to larger banks/lenders as a final product and take a hefty payout for processing the loans (sometimes the loan is so attractive that they just keep them). This practice doesn't affect the home owner at all outside of changing who you're sending the mortgage payments too.
Well, after finishing the process with them the lender approved us for 290k (comparable to like 500k in this current economy) with a considerably lower interest rate. About 2 months after purchasing our home guess who buys my loan, good ol' Wells Fargo. They paid for my loan when they could have had it for free. Honestly, I was the real winner. I got a better rate, higher loan approval, my accounts are with WF so payments were a breeze and I got some revenge.
TLDR; Worked for Wells Fargo and got an embarrassingly low home loan approval. Went with a local lender, got a much better deal. Then Wells Fargo purchased my loan from the lender. It was a Win/Win for me. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
Cool, don’t come crying to the internet when your ass gets fired. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
They fucked around and found out. While these people are using mouse jugglers or something to pretend like they’re working, best believe some other worker is picking up their slack. Fuck these people screwing over their coworkers, greedy “me first” attitudes. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
It’s all propaganda. Remember all this can be addressed and changed if there’s a problem with a union issue. Remember, it’s a contract – and negotiated.
Police and fireman are cordially given union contracts because the rich want them there to protect them.
Companies were in bed with the unions. They let the unions run rogue so they could complain and get rid of them.
So with that said, there needs to be something in place to address workers needs and to protect them. Unions don’t have to protect assholes. Systems can be made and put in place so it doesn’t happen. But sadly unions protecting assholes was a tool of the corporations to show that unions were harmful to them.
Everyone bitches about boomers. Read Reddit it’s all over the place. Boomers like me were unionized. We got good pay. Good pensions. Good benefits. I was a registered nurse. Yes I walked to picket line. Now I own two houses, one on the ocean beach. I’m retired. If I wasn’t unionized., this wouldn’t happen. Don’t feel sorry for the hospital system. Paying me what I deserved/earned didn’t disadvantage them.
Contracts aren’t bad things. It’s what unions negotiate. CEOs of companies have contracts. So do many others, many others who don’t want you to have a contract. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
Another reason why WF is a horrible corporation. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
Everyone feels safe spilling Jewish secrets until the Jews use their space laser to carve a dick into their front lawn.
It's a circumcised dick though so it's totally kosher! | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
Bet this didn’t even happen. Just Wells Fargo propaganda. They are just trying to continue to fire people and not pay severance so Charlie can continue getting salary increases. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
What do you think is the difference between a benign script for keeping your PC awake or changing your desktop background, and a malicious script that hijacks your browser or steals your credentials?
Hint: in Security's eyes there is no difference, at least for detecting the activity.
They're roughly the same thing and will both be detected the same way. For sure they're written to perform different tasks, but all Security sees is "powershell execution". | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
All Indians? | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
lol I handle my work, I edit movie trailers for a living. I won’t be crying | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-15-06 |
>Maybe they’ve started to value ethical behavior now 🤷🏻♂️
Funniest line I've read all day. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-15-06 |
at my first real 'startup' job, in office, i made a mac toolbar app that just played keyboard noises.
id hit play, get up and walk away. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-15-06 |
Thank god my job doesn’t force a tracking software on me. The only thing they see are my results and my online status on slack.
That said, I have a full day of work so it’s noticeably if I’m not doing anything.
That said, if your employees finishes his whole days worth of work in the first hour, what’s wrong with letting them basically take the rest of the day off? As long as they’re available for anything that comes up right? They can either take their time and drag out the work day to 8 hours, or finish quicker and do other things.
One makes them an enjoy their day, the other burns them out. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-15-06 |
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I was commenting on the state of Reddit. Obviously not saying that it was a single entity. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
Then they will likely be at parity while the AMD card will remain much cheaper and with shorter lead times.
And almost nobody submits to MlPerf except NVIDIA. It's not a useful or important benchmark. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-15-06 |
TIL Google, Intel, Dell, HP, Oracle, Qaunta are a bunch of nobodies on MLPerf | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-15-06 |
In the inference benchmark there was only one Google TPUv5 result, one intel Gaudi2 submission, a handful of Qualcom results, and **87** NVIDIA systems.
In the training benchmark there were four TPUv5 systems, Tinybox submitted a system built with AMD gaming cards, and **83** NVIDIA systems.
Only NVIDIA spends any real time and money on this collection of outdated and irrelevant tests.
Nobody spending a billion dollars on AI accelerators cares how llama2 or chatgpt-3 runs. They are not interested in ResNet-50. They aren't running Stable Diffusion.
These are irrelevant workloads which have no meaning to the people who would buy an NVIDIA Eos or equivalent systems which is why MLPerf only ever receives a small handful of submissions. But NVIDIA lives and breathes off these sorts of headlines so for them it's worth it. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-15-06 |
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A London hospital, facing blood supply disruptions after a cyberattack last week paralyzed operations, is asking its own clinical workers for blood.
King’s College Hospital is calling on staff with the blood type O to schedule donations, according to an internal memo sent to staff and reviewed by Bloomberg News. The hospital declined to comment. National Health Service, the publicly funded health care system in England, didn’t respond to a request for comment.
The letter followed a broader appeal issued by NHS England to the general public for blood donations and is only the latest fallout from a ransomware attack that has plagued several of the region’s medical centers since June 4. The hack against Synnovis, a provider that helps manage blood transfusions and testing for the hospitals, has forced some facilities to delay medical operations, postpone blood samples and resort to handwritten records. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-13-06 |
This is the third time for the exact same attack. Ransomware is easy to protect against by using off site differential backups. That way the information is always being written fresh to the backup and if a target device becomes unusable restoring the data can be done on an as needed basis. Rsync should be able to do all these tasks and it’s free. Another idea is to keep a local hard drive for the backups so that in the event of a ransomware attack the hard drive can just be swapped for the encrypted ransom drive which won’t have been encrypted yet. Windows has tools to do this. There’s no explanation for this happening more than once to a company unless they don’t care about the disruptions. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-13-06 |
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So, hard to swallow the Hamas terror organization is also full of lies? | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
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Something wrong with labor movements, Mr Privately Wealthy(I presume)? | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-13-06 |
Fear you mean? | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-13-06 |
Totally. AI as it's presented today is interesting in the same way I think 3D printing is interesting. It can do certain things you aren't used to seeing, some of them very well, but it isn't mainstream enough to be "the" thing it feels like the tech industry wants it to be.
The key thing tying all these three together (NFT/blockchain, metaverse, LLM AI) is that each of them were pushed by people trying to make money first, and offer a useful solution second. The market can sense that. Sometimes it takes a while for the hype cycle and FOMO to settle, but eventually everyone finally comes home and has to use the thing they purchased, and if they discover that whatever that "thing" is turned out to be useless or at the very least offered only a sliver of advertised value... well, word's gonna get out and the bubble will burst.
You can't bullshit your way to profitability. At least not long term. Facebook got popular because it was valuable to people as a service. The metaverse failed because it wasn't. Plain and simple. You don't "need" a world solely designed to extract money from users that is connected to all others. It doesn't benefit anyone but the rent-seekers. Anyway that's a tangent for another thread. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-13-06 |
"Hey, congrats on your graduation!" - 137Fine is incapable of writing this themselves | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-13-06 |
If you look in my post history there is a great example of this type of thing. I just wanted to know my shoe size in a different country. Got a small summary with contradictory information, none of which was right. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-13-06 |
You just gotta face the reality you live in: Our economy is not labour-focused anymore, it’s capital-focused. It’s a subtle difference.
AI is the first painful step towards what comes after capitalism. The longer you cling on capitalism, the more pain you are inflicting onto yourself.
And yes, transitioning from this system to whatever comes next is and will be painful, as normal with every major societal change. But by attempting to delay the inevitable you are just making it worse.
We are going towards the elimination of labour in its entirety. Then we will have societal unrest, UBI will be implemented as a temporary measure, and then we will come up with something that works slightly better than capitalism.
Accept this, or keep complaining on Reddit and accomplish nothing. Plenty of people keeping you company in this unfruitful internet victimism. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-13-06 |
If you want to know one source of this protective feeling: non artists are getting really sensitive about not feeling like their prompt engineering is just as valid or well received as someone that is a painter/sculptor/musician. I had someone that was really proud of their "composition," it was just a really bad Suno creation. Person was PISSED and took it really personally. Like bro, you took ten seconds to write a prompt, what are you upset about.
At least that explains while people get FURIOUS when you say AI art sucks. "Well it will get better and all you stupid artists wasted your time learning art!!!" Yeah it will get better but the latter is kinda maybe and isn't really the point right now. Anyway, the other thing that is overlooked about artists is that taste is the human factor here and if you don't have taste, doesn't matter how good your prompt is, an AI can't give you that. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
Just google for Reddit bot services.
There are plenty out there where someone can purchase “organic advertising” where high karma accounts make posts you create to push a narrative. They can talk about how great Halo is, for example. You can also pay for upvotes as well, and full on multi-week campaigns with many high karma posters and threads.
This is why you see random bots out there everyday that seem to steal other people’s comments and post on farming threads. They steal comments so it isn’t obvious that they are bots trying to earn karma. Someone has to build the high karma account army after all that are then used to sell this advertising. Likewise, you can sell your own high karma account to these people for a few bucks to save them some time as well. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
Lol well thanks for that unhealthy rabbit hole. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
It's quite fitting to the thread that things are more binary than ever | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
Nah. The problem is that Reddit used to be pro-technology and now the only thing the technology subs do is complain about it and downvote the tech nerds who are now in the minority. It's sad to see how the site has devolved over the last decade. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
Why? Your friends and beta readers are actual people giving actual, human feedback. If you're okay with AI, sure, feed the machine. But it's a LLM. You'll think the feedback makes sense, when in actuality is copy/pasted nonsense, scraped from the Internet. Get humans. They have real feelings and opinions about things. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
Because it’s not. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-15-06 |
Or it's because companies will be just fine with 70% of the quality at 0.00005% the cost. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-15-06 |
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The o ly advantage for me is that Roku comes preinstalled on the tv, so I I dont need to fight whatever “smart tv” bloatware comes on the tv I buy. Otherwise apples interface is just as good if not better. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-13-06 |
I don't understand how so many people don't notice/mind it. Between that and some of the resolution upscaling stuff, it becomes really obvious that what you're looking at is a manufactured set, and makes it look a lot cheaper imo. I can't fucking stand it, but my roommates barely notice it. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
Same here. Noticeable upgrade and worth every penny. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-15-06 |
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Verge covers [Pew](https://www.pewresearch.org/journalism/2024/06/12/how-americans-get-news-on-tiktok-x-facebook-and-instagram/):
*The survey, released Wednesday by the Pew Research Center, looks at the role major social media platforms — Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, and X — play in Americans’ news diets.*
*According to the survey, TikTok is the second most popular source of news after X, though most TikTok users don’t primarily think of the shortform video app as a news source.*
*Though most TikTok users don’t primarily use the platform with news in mind, the Pew survey suggests that its popularity as a news source is on the rise — as are lawmakers’ concerns about the information users see on the app.*
*Among TikTok users, only 15 percent say keeping up with the news is a major reason they use the app. Still, 35 percent of those surveyed said they wouldn’t have seen the news they get on TikTok elsewhere.*
*And unlike other apps, the news users see on TikTok is just as likely to come from influencers or celebrities as it is from journalists — and it’s far more likely to come from total strangers.*
*(Meanwhile, most Facebook and Instagram users say the news that pops up on their feeds is posted by friends, relatives, or other people they know; on X, users are more likely to see news posted by media outlets or reporters.)* | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-13-06 |
Got in argument with a family member the other day who was regurgitating “news” from tik tok. Apparently, Fauci and the CCCP are bedmates who purposely released COVID in order to increase biracial Americans.
This babbling idiot is related to me. Thanks social media | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-13-06 |
You can find journalism here if you look for it. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-13-06 |
My girlfriend does get news from TikTok, but she’s extremely intelligent and we can always verify what is mentioned. The main news sources on TikTok do actually provide good information about topics not generally covered, it’s just all about which tiktokers are showing you info.
It really ends up as no different than what other people see, since the main places people get news is from Facebook, twitter, and Reddit anyways. People that follow far right content will see the same bs no matter where you go, and people following liberal news will only read super misleading headlines everywhere.
My only problem with TikTok is how hard going back to a previous video can be. So you’ll see something once, internalize it, but if you’re ever questioned about it there’s not a good way to pull up your source again unless you liked the video. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-13-06 |
Anecdotally, I use TikTok and Reddit for almost all of my news. The algorithm is just really good at showing me news related to things I'm interested in. I don't care about 90% of US politics and news, but I like knowing what's up and coming in technology spheres.
No other mainstream websites seem to be matching that ease of use.
15 min of tech news and AI gossip with D&D and lifehack videos mixed in. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
The real bots keep you from seeing who you think are bots | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
Actually I was talking about how a vast majority of the news broadcast/channels in this country are owned by the same company you troglodyte. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
How tf does that make any sense 🤣 | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
My mom does that shit. She believes in schizo people who claim to have “visions” about the future on the dark corners of YouTube. She brings this up whether in front of my friends or a family birthday party. 🤦🏾♀️ | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
To say is the same as Reddit is a joke. These people aren’t talking about reading or glancing at articles linked on TikTok (like how Reddit works), they’re talking about a video clip of random person reacting to news or making a comment on news. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
On this topic, there's a bill called KOSA that aims to extort people into sharing their ID and Social Security to use the web and allows states to censor whatever they consider “inappropriate.” It’s a censorship campaign and poses a real threat to our privacy, safety, and freedom of speech. Call any Senator or Representatives you can to stand against it and/or go here. Don’t trust Blumenthal either, he’s behind nearly every internet censorship bill and wholeheartedly knows what others will do with it.
It forced its way through the House Subcommittee last month. Please help stand against KOSA. [https://www.badinternetbills.com/](https://www.badinternetbills.com/) [Extra Link](https://www.change.org/p/save-our-free-and-open-internet-stop-the-kids-online-safety-act?utm_content=cl_sharecopy_36858566_en-US%3Acv_9182&recruiter=1322617551&recruited_by_id=a35b7350-8b53-11ee-a756-6f78079d5597&utm_source=share_petition&utm_medium=copylink&utm_campaign=psf_combo_share_initial&utm_term=psf_combo_share_initial&share_bandit_exp=initial-36858566-en-CA) | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-13-06 |
r/technology | post | r/technology | 2024-13-06 |
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No but I’ve got these very long arms for touching | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-13-06 |
Seems like Qualcomm tried to pull a sneaky and was caught. Well sucks to be Microsoft and any of the hardware manufacturers. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-13-06 |
actually appl has a licensing agreement with arm until 2040. it isn't immuned to ip licensing as you believed. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-13-06 |
That's 16 years out, and the longest Apple have stuck with a CPU architecture was 14 years (under Intel). Chances are that they will move on to a design entirely of their own or based on an open architecture like RISC-V by then. Who knows? The way things are in this timeline, Motorola may even make a comeback with the 68000000 series of processors and they go full circle... ;-) | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-13-06 |
TL;DR version - ARM wants Qualcomm to stop selling ARM-based processors. ARM would prefer that MediaTek sells their processors to Windows OEMs because it seems that ARM and MediaTek have a deal that favors ARM. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-13-06 |
"was sufficiently different to be something “new”."
What does this have to do with anything?
Qualcomm is claiming they have a license to use existing ARM technology in their own products. There is no requirement for newness since they are not getting a patent on new technology or trying to create anything completely new. They are merely licensing the use of existing technology for use in their own products.
Whether or not the license agreement carries over through the acquisition is the point that is relevant, not anything regarding new or unique claims. | r/technology | comment | r/technology | 2024-14-06 |
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