@pho4cexa yet another reason: “Nikolaus was playing around with the capacitors to solve the sirring noise. […] A few solutions exist: Instead of using one capacitor, use smaller ones parallel. This works - and the sirring is more quiet then, but we couldn't completely eliminate it. …” ― https://pyra-handheld.com/boards/threads/stop-the-sirring-noise.82532/
@pho4cexa it could be for safety (iirc from https://www.youtube.com/user/EEVblog/videos ) or it could be cost optimization “…the insane price hikes caused by Apple customers’ insatiable demand for iPhones. All 0.01, 0.1, 1.0, 10 and 100 µF capacitors have gone mental – a five-to-ten times price hike. The solution has been to replace 20 large 10 µF 0805 capacitors with 40 smaller 4.7 µF 0603 capacitors, all in pairs. Yes, really, it significantly lowers the cost of the board.” ― https://www.crowdsupply.com/eoma68/micro-desktop/updates/hdmi-review-and-thank-you
big thanks to Hans @eighthave for the first technical integration with @exodus App requests for packaging in F-Droid are now automatically scanned for trackers and tagged if they're found 🎉
@bignimbus [joking] I independently replicated second point with a real cat and a real string. I replicated first point by reading original notes from Schrödinger. There is a cat there.
Therefore we have at least one experimental proof. Our p value approaches Higgs boson. We need to publish our findings ASAP for higher impact.
The First Things First manifesto from 1964. Graphic designers advocating for a use of their trade that has more benefit to the social good.
"In common with an increasing number of the general public, we have reached a saturation point at which the high pitched scream of consumer selling is no more than sheer noise."
Just to repeat, that's *over 50 years ago*. It sure as hell hasn't gotten any better.
@cercerilla I recently bought a similar thing (although cheaply, because it was faulty, but I repaired it) and it is amazing how convenient such a trifle is.
@stsp@Alda exactly that. Context matters and that is also acknowledged by FSF / #copyleft creators
“Some libraries implement free standards that are competing against restricted standards […] For these projects, widespread use of the code is vital for advancing the cause of free software, and does more good than a copyleft on the project's code would do.” ― https://www.gnu.org/licenses/license-recommendations.html
We shall take account of the real world and adjust our actions if we want to introduce _effective_ improvements.
@jacquespa alas, I did not have similar problems, but 1. I use connman 2. there is no WiFi pollution in my area.
Is your network on a channel far away from the strongest networks nearby? Maybe it is an interference issue. Did you recreate those connection problems on an isolated network?
Do you use wpa_supplicant, Network Manager, connman, wicd?
Dunno in general. Those chips are very popular/battle-tested. They should work w/o issues.
@lthms join us on #xmonad, we can help. I doubt it is XMonad related problem, b/c we have users counting every interrupt in PowerTOP. (Maybe you could tweak some GHC’s RTS settings for even better performance.)
*But* if i3 works for you and you do not miss anything from XMonad then go for it.
@aparrish First, thank you for being so thoughtful. It is a joy to read it.
Second “Currently, Colaboratory only works with the desktop version of Chrome.” ⸮ Lovely to see how Big Corp respects open web, open standards, [Žižek’s voice] and so on and so on.
Third “Jupyter is the open source project on which Colaboratory is based.”. This is exactly where reciprocal license like #AGPL could force Big Corp to give back what they took.