

what if you are displaying a live bill for a service billed monthly, like bandwidth, and are charged one pence/cent/(whatever eutopes hundredth is called) per gigabyte if you use a few megabytes the bill is less than a hundredth but still exists.
what if you are displaying a live bill for a service billed monthly, like bandwidth, and are charged one pence/cent/(whatever eutopes hundredth is called) per gigabyte if you use a few megabytes the bill is less than a hundredth but still exists.
I actually have some leggings that have bigger pockets then most male jeans (able to fully contain 2 16floz cans per pocket)
but you can, it’s about as likely as having one from a thigh-job but is technically not impossible.
maybe if it was able to do anything useful (like tell me where specific settings that I can’t remember the name of but know what they do are on my phone) people would consider them slightly helpful. But instead of making targeted models that know device specific information the companies insist on making generic models that do almost nothing well.
If the model was properly integrated into the assistant AND the assistant properly integrated into the phone AND the assistant had competent scripting abilities (looking at you Google, filth that broke scripts relying on recursion) then it would probably be helpful for smart home management by being able to correctly answer “are there lights on in rooms I’m not?” and respond with something like “yes, there are 3 lights on. Do you want me to turn them off”. But it seems that the companies want their products to fail. Heck if the assistant could even do a simple on device task like “take a one minute video and send it to friend A” or “strobe the flashlight at 70 BPM” or “does epubfile_on_device mention the cheeto in office” or even just know how itis being ran (Gemini when ran from the Google assistant doesn’t).
edit: I suppose it might be useful to waste someone else’s time.
it makes sense when you compare it to the alternative: unincorporated land.
I’m surprised that they didn’t do this first.
yeah, I know there are pedo instances so I figured, but didn’t want to assume, that there would be nazi instances.
I fear that the Nazis will come first, but am hopeful they keep to their corner.
he is a leader for a country that is actively being bombed by Russia, I would expect him to do better at bootlicking if he wants foreign aid.
it also emphasizes the importance of knowing how the items built into your house work.
early CDs suffered from the data layer literally falling off, some blu rays are known to suffer from bit rot, vinyl gets damaged whenever it’s played.
caller id is the thing that tells you the number. it isn’t cheap to forge, but it’s the only way a scan could reasonably effect anyone with more than half a brain. there is never a reason to send information to an unknown SMS number, or click on a link from a text message from an unknown number.
yes, but that is fully expected and Zelensky should have been prepared.
if the cellular carriers were forced to verify that caller-ID (or SMS equivalent) was accurate SMS scams would disappear (or at least be weaker). Google shouldn’t have to do the job of the carriers, and if they wanted to implement this anyway they should let the user choose what service they want to perform the task similar to how they let the user choose which “Android system WebView” should be used.
not everyone is opposed to seeing gore on their racism app
the input is good quality data/code, it just happens to have a slightly malicious purpose.
I only go a couple times a year, but it’s still nice to have the convenience of 12 hours of travel instead of more than a day.
yeah, but it is nice if the towel rack is screwed into studs so it can be used as one in a pinch.
it’s as much “real” art as photography, taking a relatively finite number of decisions and finding something that looks “good”.