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4 wk. ago
  • I only go to raves and specific artist/label events these days, so I'm not too sure what's happening in mainstream clubs on a Saturday night. In my experience, the dance floor is always full later in the night and people are enjoying the music and having fun. Interesting to note that one guy quoted in the article complained about people "just jumping" instead of dancing - that's the result of genre trends in electronic music, not social media or smartphones changing our behaviour. The more popular mainstream club genres for at least the last decade have been house sub-genres like Big Room that are festival-friendly and designed to be jumped to.

  • Sure, it's a fun thought bubble. I'm still not convinced it's anything more than that at the moment (and the abysmal sales appear to back that up). Apple's hesitance to enter the market also speaks volumes.

  • UAE Team Emirates has a massive budget and has recruited some of the best riders in the world to support the best rider in the world, Pogacar. So yeah, of course they're are stronger than most other teams. INEOS has declined massively over the last decade (maybe you should be questioning what they've been doing) and until very recently AG2R had nowhere near the budget of the big teams. At every point throughout history there have been big teams and small teams, that's how the sport works. Comparing the biggest team to a couple of middling ones and saying "look how much better they are, they must be cheaters!" is a nonsensical argument.

    In any case, the original point you seemed to be making was that Vingegaard, the second best GC rider in the world, is clean but the guy he has beaten in multiple stages and stage races, Pogacar, is a doper. Like I said, I don't understand how you can come to that conclusion. It just sounds like emotional reasoning because Pogacar's dominance reminds you of Armstrong. You've been following the sport long enough to remember that Armstrong was far from the only doper of his generation, and his team was far from the only one circumventing the rules.

  • That concept doesn't seem to appeal to anyone beyond the stereotypical "gadget geek" influencers on YouTube, who in some cases aren't even paying for these devices. Most people don't work on their phones, nor do they want to. Most people also don't have the time or the need for a larger screen that they can carry around everywhere. If they want to use a larger touchscreen device, for common use cases like watching videos or drawing, they want to be doing it for longer periods in a relaxed environment. In which case, there is no reason to buy one of these expensive folding phones over a tablet with a usable aspect ratio and a vastly superior screen that doesn't have a giant crease down the middle.

  • From the report:

    Despite the financial attractiveness of household energy upgrades, many households including renters or those on low incomes have no ability to undertake upgrades. Furthermore, even consumers who can invest in household energy upgrades are subject to “bounded rationality” – a barrier that is often overlooked by energy efficiency policies.

    Increasing minimum energy performance standards to encourage a shift from gas or inefficient electric appliances to efficient electric alternatives is a compelling solution. New legislation to phase out gas hot water systems in Victoria presents one example of an approach to achieve this, and there is an opportunity to reinvigorate the federal Equipment Energy Efficiency programme.

    In the near term, financial incentives play a critical role to reduce the upfront cost hurdle for consumers and scale up the industry capacity to deliver upgrades. However, the current approach to incentives is piecemeal.

    Victoria and New South Wales have implemented broad-based incentives for household energy upgrades, but there is a case for more comprehensive national versions of these schemes to be rolled out, which could be complemented with specific state government schemes where they would bring further benefits.

    Pricing reform is not the sole solution, but it is nonetheless critical to ensure consumers have access to fair electricity plans that reward their contributions to the grid, without imposing unrealistic expectations on consumers to become energy traders.

  • Pogacar was 28 seconds slower than Vingegaard in a time trial half this distance last month, but go off. It wouldn't be the Tour without one-eyed fans arbitrarily deciding which rider is doping based on whether they were happy with the day's results.

  • The time trial is tomorrow. so I'm not 100% sure if any of the major players will be risking a move today. But I agree that the course seems perfect for someone to try an attack, particularly with how hard the final climb is and how close it is to the finish. It looks harder than Stage 2, and Pogacar and Vingegaard were both very close to winning there.

  • What hardware (other than 5G antenna) changed since the first/second one?

    Everything would have changed. Smartphones are not desktop computers, they are not designed to be iterated on piece-by-piece over a long period of time. Fairphone has been trying to convince Qualcomm to develop a modular chipset that can be swapped out like a desktop CPU, but it is just one small European company in an industry filled with global giants. It doesn't have a lot of bargaining power, unfortunately. The same can be said for its negotiations with suppliers, which is why Fairphones tend to have very middle-of-the-road specs and don't lead the industry in any area. It is designing and sourcing with long-term availability in mind, because it knows it doesn't have the market power to go out and demand things.

    Since Fairphone is unable to create a truly modular phone, it is forced to release newer models to keep afloat as a business. It releases one phone every two years, less than most manufacturers, and has a very low profit margin. Less than 0.1% in 2022, for example. It's also a bit of a misconception that Fairphone is solely focused on modularity or e-waste, because it is also doing a lot of work behind the scenes on industry working conditions and pay rates throughout its supply chain and is taking on an advocacy role within the industry to push for change. For example, in 2020 it launched the Fair Cobalt Alliance which now has over 20 members, including major tech companies like Google and Tesla.

  • If your car is 2x the size of a normal car then that should mean you suffer 2x the pain. Not everybody else.

    Everyone else does suffer the pain, though, because these people park on the street and effectively remove the left lane for several hundred metres at all times.

  • I live in an area with a lot of new developments and this is definitely a planning problem that needs to be looked at. Many roads constantly have rows of cars parked along the side because none of the owners use their garage (either because their oversized car doesn't fit or because the development is too tight to get in and out of comfortably).

  • Which bit do you disagree with? People have been saying this about the price for 6 years now. "Oh the price will come down when the technology stabilises". Yet book style foldables in the West have had very little in the way of innovation now for several generations and they're still the most expensive phones by far.

    As you point out, all phones are large now. So is there really a sizeable corner of the market out there for an even bigger (but not as big as a tablet and in a weird aspect ratio) phone? Compact devices are niche, true, but niches sell because they are catering to a small corner of the market. Book-style foldables don't even appear to have a niche audience after 6 years.

  • Nobook, which was shared here last month. Very clean and lightweight app with a much nicer interface than the app I was previously using (Friendly). Thanks to @[email protected] for recommending it! It's not on an app store so I wouldn't have found it without you sharing it here.

  • Android @lemdro.id
    Ilandar @lemmy.today