My apologies guys - not a bot, near as I know. And yes, I swear I clicked the "Cybertruck sales slump" Thread. My mistake. I will leave this here as a record of my shame.
Lutra
just for history - at this time the core one hasn't been released. they've just shown demos at shows.
The left hand giveth, and the right hand taketh away.
My next printer is a Prusa One. Because Prusa. I've watched all the videos on 'why Bamboo', and the bias in all of them is people who are running or want to run a business/farm. While that's a good selection for people who actually use the machines, what is different is how they process costs and inconvenience - because its a business, they can pass costs down to their customers, they can just as a couple reviewers said, "just buy another printer and keep moving".
This is not my use case. I'm looking for a tool for my house/life. It's more like buying a pedestal table saw, or a complete set of cordless tools, a lawn tractor or a small pickup truck. I'm the end customer. I can't 'pass on maintenance costs'. I want a well-made tool that I can happily use for a long long time.
Between the products is not a heck of a lot of difference, they both ooze plastic. Between the two business philosophies, miles and miles. And I can't say I don't want to live in a world filled with bad business philosophies, and then give those same people my business, because they have a cheaper sticker.
I don't buy devices that aren't mine anymore. And it while it often initially costs more, over life, will cost me less - in money, in time, in aggravation.
Just clearing up the argument.
- The files will be scanned
- They've been doing for decades
There's a difference here in principle. Exemplified by the answer to this question: "Do you expect that things you store somewhere are kept private?" Where, Private means: "No one looks at your things." Where, No One means: not a single person or machine.
This is the core argument. In the world, things stored somewhere are often still considered private. (Safe Deposit box). People take this expectation into the cloud. Apple, Google, Microsoft, Box, Dropbox etc - only made their scanning known publicly _after they were called out. They allowed their customers to _assume their files were private.
Second issue: Does just a simple machine looking at your files count as unprivate? And what if we Pinky Promise to make the machine not really really look at your files, and only like squinty eyed. For many, yes this also counts as unprivate. Its the process that is problematic. There is a difference between living in a free society, and one in which citizens have to produce papers when asked. A substantial difference. Having files unexamined and having them examined by an 'innocuous' machine, are substantial differences. The difference _is privacy. On one, you have a right to privacy. In the other you don't.
an aside...
In our small village, a team sweeps every house during the day while people are out at work. In the afternoon you are informed that team found illegal paraphernalia in your house. You know you had none. What defense do you have?
I just read up, and I didn't know this is not so much about stopping new images, but restitution for continued damages.
The plaintiffs are "victims of the Misty Series and Jessica of the Jessica Series" ( be careful with your googling) https://www.casemine.com/judgement/us/5914e81dadd7b0493491c7d7
Correct me please, The plaintiffs logic is : "The existence of these files is damaging to us. Anyone found ever in possession of one of these files is required by law to pay damages. Any company who stores files for others, must search every file for one these 100 files, and report that files owner to the court"
I thought it was more about protecting the innocent, and future innocent, and it seems more about compensating the hurt.
Am I missing something?
It seems like that uses the displaylink tech. have you tried the linux driver? https://displaylink.org/forum/forumdisplay.php?f=29
An eGPU while costlier, is less cpu intensive, has one cable and with newish graphics card will have 3 or 4 outputs.
Is it because they didn't use a ranked choice voting mechanism? ( said in partial jest)
Why use the term 'conveyor belt'? No conveyor. No belts. Automated cargo containers.
just to be clear, for fear we mentally normalize this
- this is hostile behavior from Chrome
- what the customer does with the browser, in a sane world, is of no concern of the guy who made it.
to accept that another person has one sided authority to determine what you can and can't do with a tool, after it is in your possession is weird.
Yes, I must have misclicked. Apologies. Thank you.