it means you are blaming the wrong thing/person for an issue.
it means you are blaming the wrong thing/person for an issue.
For posterity and nuance, here’s the answer from their site: Which devices are supported? but you’re right for the most part.
I see it following the same trend as other social media IPOs. Line goes up for a bit and then down way below the initial IPO price after a few weeks.
Their legal page mentions the Netherlands, Finland, and Germany. I don’t know which of the latter two they’re hosted in but their hosting company is German, and Germany are a bunch of assholes when it comes to copyright.
Per https://lemmy.world/post/13320356, they got a takedown notice and started going through everything with a fine toothed comb.
(Yes, the van Gogh was protected by glass iirc, but most other paintings aren’t)
The van Gogh was chosen specifically because it was protected by glass.
This is the original: https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/358198.358210
Probably because it only had 6000 km on it. Average is closer to 15000 km/year.
The people who work for those who call just doing what you’re paid for “quiet quitting” should show them what quiet quitting really is by going to lunch one day and never coming back.
Yelp names their own competitors in the “extorting businesses for good reviews” racket.
The second Signal works out that this exists.
Then there’s a lot of the US that they’re not going to function properly in.
I can answer the last one: shredding the lot of it. Nothing on that machine can be trusted anymore.
I’ve yet to run into a CPU that doesn’t work with 11
Every AMD processor from the Ryzen 1000-series and older. I’m not sure where the line is with Intel processors, but requiring TPM excludes a lot of otherwise useful hardware.
I have a Jellyfin server running in the office. The video card is about 6 months old. The CPU, case, and motherboard are going on 12 years old.
Employment contracts in the US are quite rare. 49 out of 50 state are at-will employment (Montana being the exception), so they can fire you for any or no reason, excluding a small list of illegal reasons.
Within the laws of the location of the employer. That’s why state and sometimes even local laws matter.
Alleghany County is extremely red, Covington has a large paper plant which has a nasty smell, and Clifton Forge has a massive coal train terminal and is the most depressing place I have ever been.
Richmond, Hampton Roads, and Charlottesville contribute as well, but basically if it’s not a city or the suburbs of one, it’s red as a sunburn.
Here it’s “barking up the wrong tree”