My house has a fireplace but I still haven’t ever used it after living here for almost 5 years. I prefer the firepit outside if I’m gunna have a fire.
However, aren’t there still people that use this as their only heat source?
My house has a fireplace but I still haven’t ever used it after living here for almost 5 years. I prefer the firepit outside if I’m gunna have a fire.
However, aren’t there still people that use this as their only heat source?
Yep, try browsing with ublock origin blocking all Amazon domains. Lots of things break because AWS is so large.
The employees hired during full remote are now going to have to change their lives around going into the office. Tech employees are especially fucked because they either have to stay or they have to attempt to join the flood of tech employees looking for remote jobs (which was caused by the execs doing layoffs at tech companies).
Amazon’s tech employees hired remotely during the pandemic are now stuck: they either must change everything about their lives to go into the office (mind you, they were full remote when hired) or they must find a new job in a super competitive area (made competitive by suits laying off employees elsewhere). Seriously, remote tech jobs get hundreds if not thousands of applicants per listing.
Those people are fucked.
I’m good
It doesn’t matter that they’re in the same industry. They’re not competing against each other, and it’s an antitrust case.
Russia will send you to the meat grinder soon, not to worry
I’m not sure how Uber is relevant to Google’s antitrust case, they’re two different companies in two different sectors. Google does not have a ride-sharing service.
Maybe changing the subject to something other than Google shows the cracks in this article and your motives?
Why does the headline & story use megabytes for this? Especially in a report about 2023.
60hz on a 2024 flagship is just sad.
It’s also only on the unlimited plan.
Userbenchmark has always been trash
Intel’s chipmaking business may have run into a bit of a snag, as recent tests using the company’s next-gen manufacturing process have failed, according to Reuters.
To carry out the tests, Intel reportedly sent Broadcom’s silicon wafers — or the components used as a semiconductor’s base — through its more efficient 18A manufacturing process. After examining the results, Broadcom found that the process isn’t ready for high-volume production, Reuters reports.
The 18A process is a key part of Intel’s plan to reestablish itself as a leading chipmaker. Intel has been developing this technology for a few years now, and it plans to start producing chips using the process with major partners like Microsoft starting next year. However, the company has had a troubled past few months, as it reported $1.6 billion in losses in the second quarter of 2024 and announced layoffs affecting more than 15,000 workers. It’s also dealing with widespread issues affecting its 13th and 14th Gen CPUs.
I’m so fucking tired of the AI fad. These greedy execs can fuck off.
Huh, I actually do think that there are two things AI is ready to replace: CEOs and MrBeast.
no thanks
Uh, plenty of people have firepits.