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ryathal , to news in Uber shuts down alcohol delivery service Drizly three years after its purchase

This seems like a legal minefield to even attempt. Liquor is often treated differently than beer and wine legally, and the laws are absurdly convoluted and different for each state. I wouldn’t be surprised if the plan was just hoping that state agencies didn’t ask questions.

I wouldn’t be surprised if this is partially a response to some states asking if drivers were properly licensed to deliver alcohol.

Yoz , to technology in The FTC is reportedly looking into Microsoft’s $13 billion OpenAI investment

Fuck happened to the amazon investigation? FTC is all about news headlines and that’s it.

xodoh74984 ,

What happened is that the FTC is taking on Amazon in court as we speak:

FTC Sues Amazon for Illegally Maintaining Monopoly Power

victorz , to technology in Inside the 'arms race' between YouTube and ad blockers / Against all odds, open source hackers keep outfoxing one of the wealthiest companies.

I always wondered why YouTube doesn’t stream the ad intermixed into the video? Like, it’s DASH, right? How does that work, can’t the server send a video then switch to another stream source (the ad) and back?

zbyte64 ,
@zbyte64@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Because YouTube doesn’t want you to skip ads? If the ad was just another part of the show, you would just fast forward past the ad.

victorz ,

Well obviously seeking would be disabled during those ads. But maybe that’s not preventable.

Huschke ,

Then ad blockers could use this information to know which part of the video is the ad and block it again.

victorz ,

😏👏 Excellent

Fallenwout ,

Switching stream sources is the most easy detectable form of ads. Also the most easily blocked, simple dns blocking will suffice.

victorz ,

That’s interesting info, thanks!

ModernRisk , to technology in Inside the 'arms race' between YouTube and ad blockers / Against all odds, open source hackers keep outfoxing one of the wealthiest companies.

Got this too couple of times, all I did was F5 and go on with my day. Nothing happened.

yoz , to technology in Unsealed complaint says Meta 'coveted' under-13s and deceives the public about age enforcement | The unredacted document reveals more details from a lawsuit filed against Meta by 33 states in October.

Logical outcome should be break the company or shut it down but boomers gonna slap a $1 million fine on a $100 billion company.

FlyingSquid , to news in Self-proclaimed 'gay furry hackers' breach nuclear lab
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

“Let’s start a nuclear holocaust for the lulz” wasn’t on my 2023 bingo card, but I’ll add it to my 2024 bingo card.

MonkderZweite , to technology in Meta whistleblower tells Senate the company 'cannot be trusted with our children'

Wait, this was ever in question?

schwim , to technology in Meta is promoting Threads posts on Facebook and there’s no way to opt out
@schwim@reddthat.com avatar

There is a way to opt out. Stop using FB.

dustyData , to technology in Meta is promoting Threads posts on Facebook and there’s no way to opt out

I have Instagram because in my country it’s the only way to contact some businesses. And they are mingling threads posts in between the IG posts.

smileyhead ,

That’s a great way to make situation worse.

dustyData ,

The worse part is that it looks like a screenshot of Threads, but when you look closely it’s actually an IFrame of the whole Threads post with a link to go there and a tiny text advertisement to activate your Threads account.

repungnant_canary , to news in FCC moves forward with its plan to restore Obama-era net neutrality protections

Does someone know what’s on the photo?

chili1553 ,

I believe it’s a series of tubes

Jerkingass ,

This is the back side of a network patch panel punched down with wiring that has no strain relief.

QuarterSwede ,
@QuarterSwede@lemmy.world avatar

Great alt text summary.

johnthedoe , to technology in Netflix jacks up the price of its premium plan to $23 a month

I cancelled Netflix last month. I paid for it for about 10 years. I even had a dns set up to get US Netflix years before it even came to Australia. Because it was such a good product at the time. It hasn’t been worth it for a few years now but the software was good and it was cheap enough to keep around.

Treczoks , to technology in The original Apple Watch lineup is officially obsolete

It had been from day one, just in case no-one noticed.

The very idea of a "watch" that has a bunch of gimmics while completely fail the main job of providing the time over a long time without any hassle shows how absurd this product was from the very beginning.

A good automatic, mechanical watch is way superior on that behalf. As a bonus, it looks better. And you don't have to press a button to actually see the time.

kayjay ,

… You do realize Apple Watches have had always-on screens for half a decade now? You don’t have to do anything to see the time.
And yeah, if all you use it for is to see the time, then it’s obviously not worth it. But can you listen to music through a mechanical watch? Can you use a mechanical watch to respond to text messages? Can a mechanical watch show you the map while you’re hiking?
Why even have a smartphone? You just need a landline phone. After all, it’s just pick up and dial, with a smartphone you have to unlock it to call.
Or maybe phones can be more than just phones these days? Just like watches can be more than just watches.

Treczoks ,

Just like watches can be more than just watches.

Yes. Like needing to be recharged every night, and being obsolete after a handful of years.

JoeyMoo ,

That’s an apple problem, not a smartwatch problem in general

MrSpArkle ,

Any smartwatch that has the utility of an Apple Watch will also have the battery issues of an Apple Watch.

JoeyMoo ,

Yes the batteries are small, but other brands last much longer than Apple watches. And really, setting your watch down on the wireless charger at night is no harder than plugging your phone in or taking your regular watch off and putting it on your nightstand

MrSpArkle ,

Those other brands will not have feature parity with the Apple Watch. I agree that charging the watch every light is not an issue.

abhibeckert , (edited )

Yes the batteries are small, but other brands last much longer than Apple watches

No they don’t. Apple Watches have very large batteries and very efficient processors.

Other smart watches only get longer battery life if you avoid power hungry features… and you can do that with an Apple Watch. Apple’s largest watch will last a full 30 days if you don’t use power hungry features like wifi, heart rate monitoring, music playback, Siri, GPS, etc etc. The smaller Apple watches will last almost as long in the same mode.

Most smart watches that advertise long battery life have all (or at least most) of those features, and they don’t last long at all if you take advantage of them. The Garmin FR965 (their largest watch) advertises “up to 25 days” battery life but that’s with everything disabled (and it’s also less than the 30 days you get with an Apple Watch). If you read the spec sheet for the Garmin FR965 it advertises “Up to 8.5 hours” if you make extensive use of all of the available smartwatch features. And that’s the biggest/heaviest Garmin. The popular Garmins have smaller batteries - like half the size of the battery in that Garmin.

JoeyMoo ,

That’s my bad then. For some reason I was getting my info mixed up. Anyways, yeah 30 days is a long time but companies always bullshit like that where they say “up to”. My galaxy watch 3 is pretty good on battery life, like a day and a half of me just using it regularly for time and heart rate etc. The biggest problem I have is that if I want to sleep track with it I need to remember to put it on the charger when I sit down at my desk and most of the time I forget so it dies on me.

kayjay ,

Apple Watches aren’t the only option, and watches don’t just go "obsolete" like they’ve gone out of date. Just because they don’t get more support doesn’t mean they’re unusable. This article is literally about how an almost decade old product still had official support until now, and it’s going to still be a usable product for years to come if you’re willing to put up with the slowness inherent to the first gen (seriously, 2nd or 3rd series and onwards watches could easily last over a decade or more)

Also, this criticism applies to smartphones too… but it doesn’t mean (most) people abandon their smartphones and use a Nokia 3310 for their multiple week batterylife over one that needs to charge every/every other night. The tradeoff of charging is offset ten-fold by the slew of useful features.

abhibeckert ,

My Apple Watch needs to be charged ever night.

The watch I had before needed the time adjusted every night if I wanted it to be accurate to the second which I did. And adjusting was a painful process. You can’t adjust the seconds - it resets the secondhand to zero and then you need to stare at a reliable timepiece (like maybe an Apple Watch), taking the regular watch out of time set mode at exactly zero seconds. If you miss it by a second… you need to wait an entire minute to try again.

I don’t like sleeping with my watch on anyway, so placing it on a charger isn’t a problem. And the battery lasts long enough it doesn’t matter if I forget ocasinally.

slauraure ,

There are very affordable g-shocks with multi band, using radio signals to accurately set the time every night with an atomic clock as the source. I mean if accuracy is an issue.

The solar models also charge using sunlight and fluorescent lights but will still last about 1-2 years in darkness. Regular wear will always keep it charged.

Not to say an Apple Watch isn’t right for you. Just stating that non-smart watch options exist for those who just want to tell time, date, weekday, accurately with added stuff like alarms and stopwatch etc.

max ,

I never really got this argument, to be honest. I put mine on the charger when I take a shower in the morning. If I did a long workout that day, shortly before bed, too. Other than that, I wear mine day and night. It really doesn’t feel like a big deal to me. I wouldn’t wear a mechanical (or quartz) watch in the shower either.

Fizz ,
@Fizz@lemmy.nz avatar

If you have an apple watch do you leave home without your smartphone?

kayjay ,

I often go phoneless when I go hiking or jogging, yes.

bermuda ,

I don’t personally know anybody who got an apple watch to tell the time.

JoeyMoo ,

I can see you’re a watch enthusiast. But really, people don’t buy smart watches to see the time. They buy them to more easily keep track of their fitness progress, (heart rate, bp, blood oxygen, etc.), and it’s much easier to respond to a message without having to take your attention away from something else. We shouldn’t be attacking the idea of a smartwatch because it’s pretty cool, we should be attacking the companies tracking us, stealing our data, and making us pay absurd amounts of money for something that goes obsolete in a few years.

Treczoks ,

If you have a fitness tracker - no problems with that. Needs a recharge after two or three weeks, which is not perfect, but still better than those "smart" watches that you have to feed daily.

1rre ,

Ok, I’ll be sure to use my automatic mechanical watch to check my decent speed and heart rate on my ski trip… Oh wait…

Personally I have a Garmin Fenix for the 3 week battery life but let’s not pretend that a mechanical watch and a smartwatch fill even close to the same market segment… It’s like telling someone who dropped 3k on a mountain bike to buy a car instead as it’s faster on the highway: ok, but not comparable and not relevant

Treczoks ,

Personally I have a Garmin Fenix for the 3 week battery life

Now that is a totally different beast than an Apple watch that has to be recharged daily.

postmateDumbass , to technology in A food delivery robot's footage led to a criminal conviction in LA - Serve Robotics handed footage over to the LAPD after two people attempted to steal one of its bots

Now solve an assault against a person!

Lord_McAlister , to technology in Scientists confirm that the first black hole ever imaged is actually spinning

I mean the majority of black holes spin… It’s kinda fundamental to their existance as most things in the universe have motion and when you super compress those things into a black hole, that motion has to go somewhere.

JokeDeity , to technology in The FCC plans to restore Obama-era net neutrality rules

Sounds good on paper, but I’ll bet good money they slip in some Ashit Pie level bullshit.

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