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asdaaaaaaaa t1_ja2pr26 wrote
Reply to comment by theinvolvement in New tech could bring affordable, hyper realistic screens with 1000+ Hz refresh rates by Sorin61
I'd imagine the more steps in between "generate graphics" and "display" add a considerable amount of latency. From my understanding we're already at the point where having the CPU physically close to related chips (memory's one, IIRC) makes a difference. Could be wrong, but from my understanding the last thing you want to do is throw a bunch of intermediate hardware/steps in the process if you can avoid it.
asdaaaaaaaa t1_ja2n7lx wrote
Reply to comment by jtd1776 in Workers tasked with moving products in the U.S. food and beverage supply chain are at a high risk of severe injuries and fatalities — Grocery wholesalers and grocery retail stores saw the highest number of injuries, followed closely by the warehousing and storage groups by marketrent
Nope. Agriculture and other physical labor/trade jobs are inherently more risky/dangerous. You really think a cop is at more danger than someone who works around moving heavy machinery all day? Or someone who climbs/cuts trees for a living? You can check the actual statistics year to year, FBI publishes reports on police injuries. More than half are just traffic incidents when they're not in pursuit or actively "working" on something specific. Hell, delivery/truck drivers are at a higher risk than cops.
asdaaaaaaaa t1_ja2n3uc wrote
Reply to comment by Ere_bu_s in Workers tasked with moving products in the U.S. food and beverage supply chain are at a high risk of severe injuries and fatalities — Grocery wholesalers and grocery retail stores saw the highest number of injuries, followed closely by the warehousing and storage groups by marketrent
>The danger of being a cop is actively antagonistic people who are out to hurt you. And traffic.
You can check the statistics via FBI publications on injuries for police every year. IIRC, more than half the injuries were from non-pursuit traffic incidents. Actual injuries from interacting with criminals/aggravated people were extremely low in comparison. Seeing how some police drive around here, doesn't surprise me.
asdaaaaaaaa t1_ja2mzcb wrote
Reply to comment by kafelta in Workers tasked with moving products in the U.S. food and beverage supply chain are at a high risk of severe injuries and fatalities — Grocery wholesalers and grocery retail stores saw the highest number of injuries, followed closely by the warehousing and storage groups by marketrent
Agriculture's a killer as well. Know too many people injured while I worked in that industry. With the bonus of exempt status, so agriculture businesses don't need to pay minimum wage, overtime, provide benefits for full time and a ton of other allowances.
asdaaaaaaaa t1_j9t93s6 wrote
Why would you consider this roughly an entire year late? Sure, when NFT's were new and you could still trick a decent chunk of people into buying them, but now? Not to mention why would someone who uses spotify for music care about NFT's being mixed in?
asdaaaaaaaa t1_j9qhe3g wrote
Reply to comment by drinkingchartreuse in Ransomware gang leaked Los Angeles student health records online by SaraShane
There are, but someone with enough skill can hide from agencies like that. The ones getting caught usually have made mistakes leaving/using information that ties to them. If you route your work through a country that won't cooperate with the US/home country, there's not much agencies can do but ask nicely.
asdaaaaaaaa t1_j9ol2ek wrote
Reply to comment by Slippedhal0 in Apple reportedly made a big breakthrough on a secret non-invasive blood glucose monitor project that originally was part of a 'fake' startup by dakiki
> but if it sold more products for a specific niche they'd probably think about it
*If it sold more products and provided more profit.
Doesn't matter if I sell 3 batteries for a total of 300$ when I can just force you to purchase an entire new device for 1,500$ in total every two years, along with additional services, contracts and stuff.
asdaaaaaaaa t1_j9okglg wrote
Reply to comment by RandomComputerFellow in Samsung Bixby will clone a user's voice to answer phone calls by Stiven_Crysis
When was the last time you used your actual voice to verify something? I don't know a single institution (bank, government, etc) that would even notice or say anything if I "changed" my voice.
asdaaaaaaaa t1_j9nnn6b wrote
Reply to comment by pgabrielfreak in Blizzard warning is first for Southern California mountains since 1989: National Weather Service by Anthony12125
Yeah, it's been swinging between ~40'F and ~80'F. What's crazy to me is we'll probably look back on this fondly at some point, as more extreme weather fluctuations take hold (as I understand it).
asdaaaaaaaa t1_j9kbyy6 wrote
Reply to comment by trashboatfourtwenty in Tim Hortons franchisee in P.E.I. evicts tenants to make way for temporary foreign workers | CBC News by 2028W3
Hasn't left. I know a place that rented to at least one of their employees (multiple over a period of time). From what I understand they like the dude, so it works out alright. Personally, I just know how nasty people can get with money, so I wouldn't be mixing work and home like that.
asdaaaaaaaa t1_j968s3c wrote
Reply to comment by akeean in Was reading something related to Rock Salt mining. In places like the Himalayas where rock salt mining is done in cold temperatures, a lot of miners report burns. Why is it so that salt burns in a colder surroundings? Would it be the same reason why the salt ice challenge was so dangerous? by vvdmoneymuttornot
It's how you "make" ice cream at home. You use salt + ice to drop the temperature really cold, really fast.
asdaaaaaaaa t1_j8m7s69 wrote
Honestly, I'd rather they respect the artists wishes if they never intended to release it. If it was the case of just not having the chance but intended to, go for it. I get fans and people wanting to hear everything that person produced, but I also think a major part of an artists image and art itself is what you choose to share/publish. Not an artist, but knowing some people who enjoy it, they take sharing more personal pieces very seriously and I know they wouldn't be very happy if it were "leaked" or shared publicly.
That being said, 50GB is a LOT of music, assuming the media takes up similar space to high quality audio tracks. Especially when you consider how much content/music we already have from MJ.
asdaaaaaaaa t1_j8ingbd wrote
Reply to comment by ParisGreenGretsch in As Mystery Objects Get Shot Down, U.S. Sets Up New Task Force on UFOs by Nicolas-matteo
Honestly I'm starting to wonder if that's the whole idea. Spam every thread with false claims about it being "suppressed" until people just don't care/want to hear about it anymore. I can see companies being dumb/crazy enough to try something like that, especially with how cheap and prevelent astroturfing/botting on places like reddit is now. Crazy, but unless this is a dumb meme, I see no other reason why people think "nobody is reporting".
I will say, this is the first time in awhile there's been a major, active war going on and not a lot of people are old enough to remember how news shifted the last time that happened. A lot of people aren't used to how much the news will focus on a war, even if other interesting things are going on.
asdaaaaaaaa t1_j8hvj0m wrote
Reply to comment by WiartonWilly in The Philippines accuses a Chinese ship of aiming a laser at a Filipino boat crew by amandapanda1980
Depends. They rely heavily on imports. If other countries cut them off, they'd literally starve. Not to mention how much they depend on other countries for specialized markets like chip production and manufacturing.
If it were to happen, China would need a rapid and decisive victory, something we're learning is extremely difficult, and will probably be re-learned in the future multiple times.
asdaaaaaaaa t1_j8hdzag wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Study on former citizens of East Germany sheds light on why people may choose deliberate ignorance by chrisdh79
I think that applies in some very specific situations. Generally the more knowledge/skills/abilities someone has, the more adaptable they are. Could be wrong, but ability to adapt generally helps out with survival from what I understand.
asdaaaaaaaa t1_j8fvc6t wrote
Reply to comment by GrooseandGoot in As Mystery Objects Get Shot Down, U.S. Sets Up New Task Force on UFOs by Nicolas-matteo
There's tons of reports out there. Are you having trouble finding them or something? Just google "Ohio Disaster", you can easily get 10+ articles. There's one on the front page right now. Is this some poorly crafted joke, where people pretend they can't see all the posts and articles?
asdaaaaaaaa t1_j8fe5l0 wrote
Reply to comment by TimeRemove in Biden fires Architect of the Capitol after calls for his resignation by Picture-unrelated
> The Architect of the Capitol (federal agency) has an appointee (10-year term) also, confusingly, called the Architect of the Capitol.
I expect absolutely nothing less in the form of confusing bullshit from our government.
asdaaaaaaaa t1_j8f86yc wrote
Reply to The Philippines accuses a Chinese ship of aiming a laser at a Filipino boat crew by amandapanda1980
>The Philippines on Monday accused a Chinese coast guard ship of hitting a Philippine coast guard vessel with a military-grade laser and temporarily blinding some of its crew in the disputed South China Sea, calling it a "blatant" violation of Manila's sovereign rights.
For whatever reason I was more expecting it to be a dispute between two commercial vessels, not military. It's looking more and more like they're losing their grip. With everything that's happened in the past year or so, they've just absolutely ruined their international image.
I do wonder how they're going to be handling the next 10 or so years with their economical issues and population dilemma. I figured with those coming up they'd be much more serious about diplomacy, image and all that, just seems like something you don't want to let slip as you're vulnerable.
asdaaaaaaaa t1_j7u2k5i wrote
Reply to comment by JohnGillnitz in Turkey-Syria earthquake: first aid convoy reaches Syria as combined death toll passes 17,000 – latest news by Mundane_Practice1
Usually the case unfortunately with scenarios like this. Those that can, usually leave, while the ones actually affected are generally the more vulnerable.
asdaaaaaaaa t1_j7tvotm wrote
Reply to comment by 1ndomitablespirit in People from the poorest backgrounds are far more likely to develop a mental disorder later in life than those from wealthier beginnings. More than half of people with a low educational attainment at age 30 will have a diagnosis of a mental disorder 22 years later by Wagamaga
I mean, I think the issue is most people just don't care, at least not enough to fight for it. Same with most medical issues. Look at what happens when people really care, like a tragedy or something. Generally there's no stops, money comes flowing in, things get approved rapidly, etc.
Personally I think if we genuinely were passionate about fixing something, we do a pretty good job at doing so. Unfortunately, I just don't think enough people care as well as have the resources to address issues like the poor state of healthcare.
asdaaaaaaaa t1_j7ri08c wrote
Reply to comment by Meckamp in An F-16 fighter jet doing a high-speed low pass over a car as a "show of force" by qzs1
Because they give you the same thing as normal videos, but with even less options. They do nothing better, and offer less in total.
asdaaaaaaaa t1_j7q6qsj wrote
Reply to comment by pwalkz in An F-16 fighter jet doing a high-speed low pass over a car as a "show of force" by qzs1
>If they don't understand why it happened why would they leave.
If you're confused when a military aircraft buzzes you in a restricted area, you shouldn't be driving. The reality is the military doesn't care if you understand or not, that's not important. Their job is to keep random people off restricted areas, if you can't tell someone wants your attention when you're repeatedly buzzed by aircraft, that's on you. This is commonplace in secure areas. Just look up what happened at the NSA entrance on the east coast when two dealers took the wrong turn. Same would happen at any other restricted area.
They have a lot more to lose by not keeping the place secure.
asdaaaaaaaa t1_j7pssgc wrote
Reply to comment by randyb7 in An F-16 fighter jet doing a high-speed low pass over a car as a "show of force" by qzs1
Pretty much anything that involves approaching a military facility you shouldn't, especially if they have active training at that time. That's better than how some places handle it. You get one warning to turn around, if you keep approaching they open fire until you're neutralized. IIRC, it happened at the NSA entrance years ago, two dealers didn't read the signs towards the entrance (it's very clear it's a restricted area) and panicked.
asdaaaaaaaa t1_j7pspn7 wrote
Reply to comment by PissdrunxPreme in An F-16 fighter jet doing a high-speed low pass over a car as a "show of force" by qzs1
Usually I just take the seat with me when I leave.
asdaaaaaaaa t1_ja2pz6k wrote
Reply to comment by Ordinary_Fun_8379 in New tech could bring affordable, hyper realistic screens with 1000+ Hz refresh rates by Sorin61
Agreed, reminds me of the "soap opera effect", where soap operas used to use higher FPS video (I forget the exact amount) which led people to viewing a smoother video experience as "low quality", because that's the type of shows that used to use it. Don't know the technical specifications on it, just that even I had to adjust what I viewed as "high quality" when more studios started doing the same.