Woot! Heavy timber construction!
Woot! Heavy timber construction!
Croissant starts at $2.99 per month, or you can pay $19.99 per year or a one-time fee of $59.99. That’s probably too much for casual posters, granted—McCarthy says the intended audience is really small business owners and creators “who use social media professionally, but is not their full time job.”
I can see the appeal of the annual cost—even the one-time fee. If you post at least once a week, that’s 156 posts across platforms per year. Add Instagram into the mix and now you’re at 208.
I thought X is Twitter
It looks like a wolf howling with another howling wolf head superimposed in the background. Amazing!
EDIT: If I could, I’d rename it as “The Howler Nebula”.
On the bright side, if you sell the device someone else could upgrade the storage after the fact.
I highly recommend a MagSafe-compatible case if you’re thinking of getting into the ecosystem. Even a thin TPU case is enough to keep your phone from docking correctly, if at all.
In case anyone else misinterpreted the headline, Apple is not shelving the Vision Pro as a product line—just the current Gen 1 headset.
Apple has abruptly reduced production of the Vision Pro headset and could stop making the current version of the device completely by the end of 2024, The Information reports.
Citing multiple people “directly involved” in making components for the headset, the report says that the scaling back of production began in the early summer. This indicates that Apple now has a sufficient number of Vision Pro units in its inventory to meet demand for the device’s remaining lifespan through to next year.
*Edited for emphasis.
Ok waste paper, mhmm, coffee, yep, microwave, good thinking—
FORM A UNION
Woah, woah calm down Satan.
I’ve never even thought to access BlueSky via anything but the ‘following’ tab. Wow!
tl;dr maybe don’t sleep where you print
Does this mean that 3D printing causes cancer? No, not by a long shot. But, it’s clear that under lab conditions, exposure to either PLA or ABS particulates seems to be related to some of the cell changes associated with carcinogenesis.
My wife’s 12.9 iPad Pro (whichever model when they switched over to flat edges) seemingly bent in her case. We’re generally very good with tech and have never put the iPad in a position that it could have gotten bent.
So much for the goodwill of fediverse integration.
In my situation I work from home, so having a battery at 100% capacity is pretty meaningless. The 80% capacity limit also prevents my phone from burning up on the wireless charger, so that’s another plus.
It’s been a year now and I’m still at 100% battery health. Honestly, with my level of usage I think I could stretch this device for 5-6 years.
Same story for me. I charge exclusively via MagSafe (except in the car for CarPlay), and with the 80% limit on the 15 Pro I’m back to full power pretty quickly.
Talk about convoluted.
The capacity limit of the system is not the objective of the pilot project.
[…] so why were only Apple phones affected?
The answer, it seems, is because Apple recently defected from traditional quartz-based clocks in its phones in favor of clocks that are also made of MEMS silicon. Given that clocks are the most critical device in any computer and are necessary to make the CPU function, their disruption with helium atoms is enough to crash the device.
In this case, the leaking helium from the MRI machine infiltrated the iPhones like a “tiny grain of sand” and caused the MEMS clocks to go haywire.
I used the default for about a year before switching it up to ‘Planetary’.
Off topic, but I’d love to get a Firefox-style app icon, but with a Lemming instead of a fox. Honestly, it’d just be a fat blob with teeth and that’d be ok lol
Dramatic like a fireball rising up from the crash, not the drama created by the camera and music.
Ever watch Monk, starring Primetime Emmy Award-winner Tony Shalhoub?