“It doesn’t matter if someone occasionally steals your bike” is… one hell of a crap take.
“It doesn’t matter if someone occasionally steals your bike” is… one hell of a crap take.
When the volume of potentially relevant and interesting content is enormous to the point that a standard human brain can’t possibly hope to filter through all of it in reasonable time, the algorithm makes plenty of sense.
I just want a fair algorithm that represents what is best for me and us.
The level 3 autonomy is under extremely limited circumstances, which are basically on the bighway under 40 mph. These are basically the safest possible conditions to have level 3, and it is the right place to start.
Lower Decks is still in production, and there will be plenty more.
Not a dumb question if you haven’t been keeping up.
The Steam Deck runs Linux and not Windows by default. (It can be loaded by the user if desired.)
Given their desire for a nearly-console-like experience, they put in a bunch of effort into the Proton compatibility layer to get Windows games to work here. It’s not perfect, but it really is a very good experience at this point.
I personally do have a fairly powerful Windows desktop, but the vast majority of my gaming is on Linux on my Steam Deck now.
No.
DRM is an artificial obstacle put in place to get in the way of something entirely technologically possible.
The elements discussed here are just the natural steps to perform an action outside of the standard workflow, and are actually of reasonable difficulty. Saying “you are free to do it, but I’m not going to help you” is the exact opposite of DRM.
Ooo. Could you link to it?
Curious as to what they got right and wrong.
These are actually standard English title capitalization rules. Most words are capitalized, save for grammatical articles.
https://www.grammarly.com/blog/capitalization-in-the-titles/
Elon singlehandedly decimated the future of the Supercharger network, and by extension the future of Tesla.