WhatsApp is the app for pretty much everywhere BUT United States.
WhatsApp is the app for pretty much everywhere BUT United States.
That would be a valid option… If the game was in the planning stage.
“rooted” and “jailbreak” are exactly the same procedure: obtain root access to low level hardware. The only difference is Apple fans trying to be different.
For the device to do anything near 1080p with as little latency as possible, the device MUST have a dedicated graphics chip, probably Mediatek or, hopefully, Snapdragon. Also hopefully, it might have some kind of on-board storage, at least for AndroidOS + updates, hopefully a MicroSD port for media sharing. With all of this in place, turning a stream-only device into a regular Android one is pretty much trivial.
This is exactly what I’m hoping for. This looks like a kickass emulation device once it’s jailbroken.
Posts that you can hear.
Astral projection? Heh, what a bunch of nonsenses.
We all know you need a custom-made cyberdeck and your favorite assortment of ICE breakers and you can run any server you want, SSH be damned!
Maybe Lemmy instances should bill third party apps for API calls, hmmm?
The power of a decent UX
It feels just like home. Welcome back, Sync!!
Soooo… When do we start the Fediverse fersion of SO?
What all these trend chasing CEOs fail to grasp about ChatGPT is that the Neural Network is trained to return what looks like like a human written answer, but it is NOT, IN ANY CASE, GOING TO RETURN INFORMATION. If you ask ChatGPT to write an essay with sources, ChatGPT is going to write a somewhat coherent essay with what looks like sources, but it’s going to be a crapshot if the sources are even real, because you asked for an essay with sources, not an essay USING any given source. Anyways, I’m going to heat some popcorn and wait for the inevitable fake articles and the associated debacle.
Maybe Spez is right (obligatory fuck /u/spez comment), but this blowout also brought Lemmy and other similar sites to the limelight. We’re on the stage where we early adopters are testing the waters, it’s just a matter of time until a new competitor stands above the others and Spez’s Reddit irónico s going to have to eat those words.
I’m not versed in videogame network infrastructures, but wouldn’t be enough just having a load balancer and a couple of instances to ensure “100% uptime”? At least before all instances and the load balancer itself decide to join a suicidal pact, but more instances mean less chance of a critical event happening, no?