

Perhaps if we get a sane and effective government one of these decades, they can open an anti-trust investigation into Conde Nast considering they’re using their monopoly to give an unfair advantage to their own companies using your very example.
Perhaps if we get a sane and effective government one of these decades, they can open an anti-trust investigation into Conde Nast considering they’re using their monopoly to give an unfair advantage to their own companies using your very example.
What’s this music player called? I’ve been scouring the internet for years looking for a simple spotify enabled “boom box” that doesn’t require you to use a phone to operate. Seems like such a simple product that seemingly doesn’t exist.
One cannot overstate the intergenerational trauma of the holocaust and how it impacts the worldview of the children of survivors.
Which is odd considering it was the Germans that committed the holocaust and I’m sure these people you speak of have no issue with Germany now while Palestine never committed genocide and yet they’re the villians because the holocaust happened.
Don’t bother sticking a giant PSU in there because you don’t need it and they don’t run as efficiently when you’re only drawing 10-40% of their output rating.
Imagine a rainbow on a cool spring day.
What do they call “fanny packs” in the UK? Vagina pouches?
It may be the phrasing in your original comment. It sounds like you’re questioning why anyone would watch videos on YouTube rather than questioning why YouTube is lumped in with traditional streaming service rankings.
I watch a ton of automotive centric channels, hobbyist electronics/PC/home automation/3D printing channels and a few weird niche ones like drain cleaning and dashcams, stuff you would never see (or has never been viable) on TV at least without a bunch of product placement and manufactured drama.
For TV and movies I have my own media server and I just download the stuff I, or friends and family, want to watch but I think the experience, content, and presentation is quite different than what you find on Youtube. They fill different roles for me personally as one is pure entertainment while the other is a mix of educational and entertainment in typically shorter formats.
Disney also owned April’s top streaming title, Grey’s Anatomy, which notched 3.9 billion viewing minutes and benefited from its multichannel and multiplatform availability.
WTF how are so many people still watching this show agter 20+ years? I honestly find this pretty shocking.
It can print on any surface so you could throw a mug in there and print on the side of it apparently. 3D printers require a flat bed to print an object on. It sounds like the mechanics are similar to a resin printer but with the ability to print on top of an existing object.
I’d like to imagine that you’ve found an ethernet cable that mimics the long coiled phone cords of the '80s and '90s so that you can walk around the house with your desktop PC chatting with your girlfriends all evening after school.
It’s a bad battery that’s causing this issue. You can’t calculate for a battery that’s out of spec which is why they drop from 30% to 2% in minutes or shutoff when you still show 20% remaining. The voltage sags below the minimum capable for the hardware.
And wiring is typically rated for current limits not voltage (within reason). Some 12 gauge wire doesn’t care if you’re pushing 12V, 120V, or 240V but is only rated for 20A.
Sure they did, buddy. “Educate yourself” they say just like all those antivaxxers and COVID deniers do when they speak their nonsense. “All cities had public transportation” before automobiles existed.
Hilarious
Pure garbage considering much of the internet is US based.
Depends on the workplace. At my engineering workplace I regularly hear someone yell “fuck!” or “shit!” when something goes awry. At all my blue collar jobs people cussed like sailors just as long as customers weren’t in earshot.
What does this even mean? Are you claiming all cities had railroad and public transportation hubs prior to cars being invented? I’m brainwashed because I don’t believe you can just seize private property and demolish tons of homes and businesses to build more efficient infrastructure in every moderate to large city in the country? Prior to cars existing, most cities were tiny and people didn’t commute 50 miles for work every day.
Can you point to the cities elsewhere where this transformation has occurred or where this already existed outside of maybe a handful of examples on the entire planet?
This sounds great but isn’t really feasible in cities that are already built unfortunately.
I think it’s different than you describe since they own the publisher(s) and the distribution as well. This is no different than some famous examples like movie studios buying theaters and only showing their movies or Microsoft forcing people to use Internet Explorer. The quality of journalism should be irrelevant since the law is supposed to apply equally. Your example of Twitter killing journalism is different since they have no association with those other companies.
I agree the industry is eroding but I think that has more to do with the internet as a whole and people not wanting to pay and less to do with regulations. This situation can’t help the industry if it’s killing off a bunch of companies since they can’t get fair representation on a major platform like reddit. That just leads to further consolidation and more of what we’re currently dealing with.