

I came here to make this joke but with the 68000, but you beat me to it, so here’s to the atmega328.
I came here to make this joke but with the 68000, but you beat me to it, so here’s to the atmega328.
But Code is Law! It’s decentralized and trustless, I’m really disappointed with the victims for going to big government, with cryptocurrency there’s no need for government, lawyers, or banks. The blockchain clearly already decided that the ETH belongs to the two brothers.
Now my friends know I bought an Alienware device. I’m never going to live this down.
I know you’re being flippant, but it’s worth noting that there is a considerable difference between a company getting hacked like this and an app with unfettered access to the cluster to sensors that we’ve got in our pockets.
Perhaps “state managed” would be a better descriptor for Chinese private companies, since some now have personnel belonging to the CCP serving in management or board positions.
Isn’t every Chinese company partly state-owned?
Looks like it worked a treat. Do WeChat next!
Would’ve preferred a version of this with a replaceable battery and no rear camera.
There is no reason for CBDC to use blockchain.
I read somewhere that they’d make it opt-out, but I can’t find that setting anywhere.
Probably because “installing unsigned code from an unknown source” is a mouthful. Installing implicitly means “from within the walled garden” on these devices.
Reads like Huawei marketing, if I’m to be honest.
I’ll get my friend to buy it from me for millions, then he can give the money back to me and when it sells again, we can split the profit. It’s win-win!
Understandable but this is not a fuse in common usage of the word, which is used to break a circuit to protect against over-current. Rather it’s an part that changes state irreversibly (much like a fuse would) when something happens. There is no implication that it would cut off the power to the CPU in this sense.
Weird I downloaded it in Firefox and all it shows is
******************************************************************************************
The premier sensors enabling Windows Hello fingerprint authentication are not as secure as manufacturers had hoped. Researchers have discovered security flaws in a number of fingerprint sensors used in several laptops that work with the Windows Hello authentication feature.
Saved you a click.
Binance were trading derivatives illegally in the US. They knew what they were doing, went ahead with it, helped customers avoid regulations, and willfully ignored things like KYC. They were operating illegally and deceiving their customers. Sounds like a scam to me.
I’m nearly there, except I can’t get away from Google Maps. There’s not really any alternative here that provides public transport information.