Blame the journals for that, affirming someone else’s experiment is not “publishable”.
Blame the journals for that, affirming someone else’s experiment is not “publishable”.
It’s lack of sun, kids who grow up with a lack of adequate sunlight exposure have increased risk of myopia.
It’s not screens, at least not directly, but indirectly since they keep kids inside more.
Have you tried freezing it?
Refrigerating baked goods accelerates staleness, but most baked goods freeze well.
100 nano seconds is 0.1 micro seconds, so not quite.
I imagine double digit is 99 ns or less
It’s funny how well linux works with printers, no stupid hp app, no configuration. Just hit print and done.
I wasn’t recommending it for that?
I said that it wouldn’t be good for streaming apps, like Netflix, and the previous comment was asking about Plex specifically.
Not for the shield, but there’s a Chinese device, Ugoos am6b+, that you can install coreelec on.
Coreelec is a linux os designed to run kodi, add a plex add on and it can play almost anything.
Any dolby vision profile, including the one that can usually only be played on bluray players. Any audio including TrueHD, dolby atmos, and DTS.
Sucks for streaming apps sadly, so you’d have to get another device like Apple TV or something.
I think at that point I’d mail a certified letter and cancel whatever card it’s on.
That probably wouldn’t work but one can dream.
It’s still free, just under a different plan named lite https://www.realvnc.com/en/connect/plan/lite/
Yeah it’s annoying and shitty, but it’s not so bad.
“This is the first demonstration of high resolution up-conversion imaging from 1550-nm infrared to visible 550-nm light in a non-local metasurface," said author Rocio Camacho Morales. "We choose these wavelengths because 1,550 nm, an infrared light, is commonly used for telecommunications, and 550 nm is visible light to which human eyes are highly sensitive. Future research will include expanding the range of wavelengths the device is sensitive to, aiming to obtain broadband IR imaging, as well as exploring image processing, including edge detection.”
That does not sound like an Infrared camera.
I browse all, and I just block communities that I find overly negative.
I like using a forest berry jam mix of Raspberries, Blueberries, Blackberries, Cranberries, and Strawberries.
It’s currently my favorite, but when I was a kid I liked strawberry preserves.
That gpu looks like it only has 6 pins, not 8, so it could be fine.
They don’t have to. Bikes need their own space, bus can have their own lanes which increases overall efficiency, and train lines obviously need their own space.
Damn, pretty much the only negative reviews I saw were because of epic and denuvo.
I wonder if otherwise it’s actually a decent game.
Are they still using Mp3 for audio or have they switched to something more modern for that too?
I have plenty of understanding of what virtual memory memory is. For one, virtual memory is orders of magnitude slower than physical RAM.
My point still stands, 8gb is fine if all you do is light web browsing and writing documents which is basically nothing, but at that point you don’t need a 2024 Macbook anything, you could use a older M1 Macbook and be perfectly happy.
All web browsers will use up as much ram as possible, that doesn’t mean they need it.
Even you don’t have a device with 8gb of memory, just because it’s usable doesn’t mean that’s it’s optimal, or that it’s not a ripoff to charge $200 for another 8gb.
Is lemmy really big enough for trolls?
It just seems so, pointless? Not very effective at reaching a lot of people.
Oh no I read the article, I just don’t consider that testing.
It’s not really apt to compare using ram on a browser on one computer and extract that to another, there’s a lot of complicated ram and cache management that happens in the background.
Testing would involve getting a 8gb ram Mac computer and running common tasks to see if you can measure poorer performance, be it lag, stutters or frame drops.
A bunch of nobodies ran against biden, no serious contenders.