Suddenly I’m even more glad I don’t live in the USA, jeez. Things seem to be getting worse and worse there.
Suddenly I’m even more glad I don’t live in the USA, jeez. Things seem to be getting worse and worse there.
Nope, EPYC is their server processors, not their consumer processors.
Google has more resources than Mozilla, and Chrome has long been the most popular browser so it’s not surprising others would want a piece of that pie.
I feel really lucky that it doesn’t affect Zen 3 since that’s what I have lol but I’m sure they will find some similar bug for Zen 3.
Downsizing can look scary to investors though, like the company isn’t doing well.
And no engineering job I’ve ever applied for has had me fill out an “application”. That’s not a thing. And if some place weirdly has it, then send your resume somewhere else.
You mean you’ve never filled out one of those web forms asking like how many years of experience you have with X technology, what is your expected salary, when is your earliest start date, etc? When job hunting earlier this year I’ve found those to be incredibly common.
I’m so glad I work for a remote company that states in my employment contract my job is a remote job (or at least, it doesn’t specify in-office requirements), so if they ever try to force me to relocate, it would be considered a constructive dismissal and then I get to collect unemployment benefits until I find a new job. That probably won’t happen though cause we have people working all across the country. Though, this isn’t in USA so maybe things are different there.
Of course, always get your contracts reviewed by an employment lawyer.
It’s a constructive dismissal where I live, unless your employment contract specifies you must work in the office. If it doesn’t and you applied for and accepted a remote job, then you’re pretty much golden.
I’m not in USA though FWIW.
I know this is generally the case with lawyers getting all the settlement money, but I think due to people not signing up I actually recently got a $200 cheque from the Yahoo data breach settlement in the mail lol
Aren’t they lying? Or maybe they stepped it back from the horrible reception they got lol. Or maybe it was all just a big calculated move to get people to log into Ubisoft again and possibly buy more games.
I use X11/Xorg every day. It may not be the most modern thing ever, but it has absolutely every feature I want, and doesn’t have random apps like Synergy (sorry) that say “This app is not supported in Wayland”
Everybody has a breaking point, right? This could have been the breaking point for many people.
That’s a ChatGPT generated answer 😭
Is it bad that I use ChatGPT enough to to be able to recognize that’s a ChatGPT generated answer?
Honestly those reasons aren’t the main reason why they went with the fediverse. For communism, it’s because decentralization means that companies can’t own the technology - by design. The meme “you have no power here” applies. For trans people, I believe it’s because they can have their own community that they truly own, and decide who they can link with through federation/defederation and being able to decide who can participate rather than having to put up with a company making those decisions.
If you’re gonna have an account dedicated to ChatGPT-generated answers, at least have it do something cool like a catgirl maid typing style.
What prevents Google from lying about how their algorithms work, though? How could it actually be verified? There’s no way it could just be as simple as they give their word and suddenly that’s good enough for a court ruling?
Hold up… You’re not actually saying that Chrome and Chromium will die out within a decade, and not only that, but YouTube only has a year or less left? I do not believe that at all lol
So wait, is Google only suggesting things that are popular, or are they displaying things people didn’t search out themselves? How do they prove that in court, do they need to show their source code or something?
Yep, which is all Spez and the other higher ups care about. Stop using reddit.
If that actually were the punishment, you’d actually see companies behaving a lot less evil very quickly. A tiny fine that isn’t even a blip in the companies pocket won’t do anything.
Yep, but it never will be a $2.5 billion fine.
Don’t forget wanting to introduce regulations for AI because it’s “dangerous”, but no not mine, mine is the good one.