Feels like I need to reboot my iPhone daily in order to keep applications and tabs from being terminated from out of memory issues as quickly.
Feels like I need to reboot my iPhone daily in order to keep applications and tabs from being terminated from out of memory issues as quickly.
Now we gotta have websites developing for all web browsers instead of Google Chrome like it’s Internet Explorer 2.0.
What are the lightweight Linux distributions?
How does that work? You buy at $100 a share but if it increases to $200 a share you somehow lose money? That’s a strange layer to the stock market. Please explain.
Is OpenAI a regular business too?
So it’s a regular business now?
Why is it called “OpenSubtitles” if you have to pay for it to use it in any capacity?
This launched in 2020? I thought they launched it in 2023 as a replacement to the awards system?
They shouldn’t force you to use a specific web browser to use the website properly. Google Chrome shouldn’t be the new Internet Explorer 6.
There’s like an ad every paragraph or two on sites like these. Then apparently that’s not enough so they have auto-playing video ads and pop-up ads too. Do they seriously think people will tolerate this and not go off the website?
The Wikipedia article says “payola” is an illegal practice and that text links to “commercial bribery” - so are they starting to get bribed into doing stuff like this too even though it’s a paid service? That “they want all the money” statement must go deeper than I thought.
Wait, why are there “locked icons” but not all of the non-default ones, if you need Reddit Premium to change icons in the first place according to the bottom of the screenshot? Shouldn’t the lock icon be on all of them except the default if you can’t switch?
How does that even work? Is it even possible to do that on mobile?
The API changes were the trigger for the recent controversy and the fact that they may be forced to use the buggy official app instead of an unofficial but stable and well developed app pushed people too far. The API change is what caused the blackout and disgust for Reddit.
What is aspartame? The name suggests something inappropriate to be put in a drink, like a drug.
I don’t use swiping motions to type, at most I’ve used it a few times over the years.
So does that washing machine still work, or is that spider arm critical to all useful functionality? Anyways, one part getting way more corrosion than the rest is suspicious design.
Since when did carriers have permission to do this stuff? I don’t remember stuff like this happening in 2014…
Why was the “Eternal September” a big deal? What was it like when it first happened?
How do we combat Google Chrome being Internet Explorer 2.0?