Is that an AI photo at the top of the article? Or which Palm Pilot model is that?
Is that an AI photo at the top of the article? Or which Palm Pilot model is that?
There was a discussion about this topic on Hacker News a few months ago:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40133976
One ex-Googler pointed out that due to the machine learning stuff and every new employee trying out the latest “AI” stuff on top of it, no human can understand and thus debug the search engine properly anymore.
Oh, wow, in this case this is indeed the better tactic.
Limiting charging to only 80% doesn’t do that much. It about halves the battery degradation but that’ll only be a noticeable difference after 3+ years where most people either get their battery replaced or get a new phone anyways.
Yep, we have desks at work with a built in AC socket and USB-A and USB-C for charging phones. Guess what? The USB-C only delivers 5V and thus is unsuitable to power Apple’s travel charger for MagSafe and Apple Watch.
Same with our £600 Dyson lamps. They all come with an USB-C outlet. But, again, it’s only providing 5V, no PD.
Apart from that, I’m also pretty happy with USB-C everything. Even though I still think Lightning is the better design in terms of robustness of the socket. No thin plastic lip that can break apart.
Your iOS devices should appear in Finder if they’re either connected via cable or in the same WiFi. Click the device to open the overview page in Finder. Drag&drop the .m4r file from another Finder window onto the overview page. The ringtone will be installed.
Yep, just do it in macOS using any audio editor, save up to 40 seconds as AAC M4A file, rename to .m4r and drag&drop onto your phone/iPad in Finder. Done.
How about making a Shortcut?
“I have no idea who locked it in 2015,” she said. At that time, the iPhone displayed a message saying it would unlock in 80,000 hours.
This usually happens when you hand your phone to your toddler.
See, in Germany you can buy your own cable modem or fibre endpoint and connect that to the copper wire/fibre line.
Not illegal, but the ISPs are seemingly under no obligation to give you those details. In Germany, there’s the “freedom of routers” embedded in the telco law. So they HAVE to give you everything you need to get your custom router online via their wire/fibre.
Bridge mode is just using the ISPs router and bridge that into your router. It’s not the same - you still need the ISP’s access device instead of just yours.
Yep, after moving from Germany to the UK I was pretty surprised that in the UK you’re not supposed to get this kind of information from your ISP.
In Germany you can get your own DSL/cable/fibre modem and your ISP has to give you the necessary information to get these devices into their network.
Since the Pinecil is running IronOS, it’s just a matter of time for it to also get the fall detection. And apart from the LED ring gimmick, I don’t see any huge advantages over IronOS.
What they probably meant is they didn’t include a screen because this way they can sell their overpriced battery pack.
It was - in the ancient times. Then, there were 3rd party cookies which you had to manually approve upon the initial creation. And then it went all down south and got abused via CDNs and ad networks.
I can’t see what was posted above anymore, but the DeviceCheck API lets app developers store 2 binary digits (that means 4 different states: 00, 01, 10 or 11) per device on Apple’s servers. So, no, these don’t get erased during a Factory Reset as they’re stored on Apple’s servers. But your phone will.
I’m using News Explorer. One-time purchase, and syncs your feeds and read/unread status between macOS and iOS/ipadOS.