Doing my part to contribute to the Fediverse.
Subscribe to [email protected], /r/android’s new home in the Fediverse!
Visit lemdro.id for a blazingly fast instance!
[email protected] is the biggest on the Fediverse (see https://browse.feddit.de). Posts there come up on “All” very frequently.
Sopuli.xyz is a longstanding instance hosted in Finland.
I’m surprised nobody has taken on bringing compatible hardware to market. I feel like there would (still) be crowdfunding interest.
I hadn’t heard of Pebble the Twitter competitor. It just makes me miss the Pebble watches.
I found this interesting in the comments:
Hmm, Raspberry Pi Ltd. joins RISC-V group (Jan 2019). Raspberry Pi Ltd. releases Rpi5 with a unified Rpi1 I/O chip (Oct 2023) freeing them from being tied to a particular SoC family. ARM Ltd. invests in Raspberry Pi Ltd. (Nov 2023). Hmmm… Really seems like a “here’s some cash, stay ARM.”
Can you imagine the marketing impact of a RISC-V RPi board after all these years of it being ARM based? Sure, the number of boards effected isn’t huge, but it’s the marketing impact of losing a flagship product that needs to be considered.
Source: https://www.anandtech.com/comments/21120/arm-acquires-minority-stake-in-raspberry-pi/790281
unlock origin
I prefer uBlock Origin myself.
Interestingly, it seems the average age is around 44.
This is true for any health system (labour and technology costs are huge components to health care, even in systems with universal coverage). However, there are also huge and significant costs inherent to any system that doesn’t provide universal coverage (e.g., people delaying care leading to more severe illness costlier to respond to). Private insurance systems also introduce significant cost pressures even for non-profit and publicly funded providers by driving up staffing costs and requiring more support staff to operate.
All this to say, the US doesn’t have a budget problem when it comes to health care - the primary obstacle is the policy challenge of switching to a system that does a better job at delivering care for everyone based on need rather than ability/willingness to pay. Massive cost savings follow when people are kept healthier.
They actually do spend a lot of public dollars on health, it’s just spent into a system that isn’t efficient. Universal access to care drives down costs significantly across the board - instead they have piecemeal coverage and a system with overall costs inflated by administrative staff hired solely to manage insurance billing and delayed treatments.
It’s an interesting area of policy where expanding coverage means lower costs overall.
They already spend a ton of public dollars on health. The problem is that it goes to insurance companies, administrative staff, and the downstream health costs of inadequate early access to care.
The lack of full size HDMI is still pretty disappointing.
A must have browser extension to avoid accidentally adding to their traffic volume: https://github.com/SimonBrazell/nitter-redirect
Adding my voice to the chorus here… adopt from a rescue!
No experience with this setup myself, but you may want to try [email protected].
Well that’s disappointing. Also noticed this review: https://www.gamesradar.com/cities-skylines-2-review/
Genuine question - have you considered options for moving? Long commutes are a huge opportunity cost and time sink!
I wish we had universal links to specific posts! Glad you were able to find it. Link for others: https://lemdro.id/post/2022094 - seems to be a few updates since my last visit.
Some folks on the [email protected] post about this the other day cautioned about a tracker present in the app.
It can also depend on the time of day if browsing All or which communities you’re in. Lemmy does have a lot of folks who were banned from various subreddits, but they’re a minority.
You might want to relocate the litter box or add another.