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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 16th, 2023

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  • From the California Legislature’s document site:

    This bill would enact the Right to Repair Act. The bill would require, except as specified and regardless of whether any express warranty is made, the manufacturer of an above-described electronic or appliance product, in the above-described circumstances, and in those same circumstances but sold to others outside of direct retail sales, to make available, on fair and reasonable terms, to product owners, service and repair facilities, and service dealers, the means, as described, to effect the diagnosis, maintenance, or repair of the product, as provided. The bill would also require a service and repair facility or service dealer that is not an authorized repair provider, as defined, of a manufacturer to provide a written notice of that fact to any customer seeking repair of an electronic or appliance product before the repair facility or service dealer repairs the product, and to disclose if it uses replacement parts that are used or from a supplier that is not the manufacturer.

    SB 244 has been around since the start of this year, at least officially.

    If anyone is interested in seeing how legislation changes over time, I implore you to look at this service; I would go as far as to say that educational instruction would be aided by directing students here.

    https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billNavClient.xhtml?bill_id=202320240SB244

    There is a lot of content in here but becoming accustomed to reading the text of legislation allows you to be more independent from mass media.



  • Wagner boss Yevgeny Prigozhin was on the passenger list of a jet which crashed killing all on board, Russia’s civil aviation authority has said.

    Earlier, Wagner-linked Telegram channel Grey Zone reported the Embraer aircraft was shot down by air defences in the Tver region, north of Moscow.

    The jet, which was flying from the capital to St Petersburg, was carrying seven passengers and three crew.

    They probably don’t mind losing the crew and Piggy might have been the target (assuming this was intentional) but who else got disappeared along with him?


  • Speaking with FedScoop, the officials expressed concern that USDS, led by Mina Hsiang, and GSA, led by Robin Carnahan, in the past year have focused on small, niche projects while deprioritizing big ticket items like redesigning government websites, setting tech policy standards and improving agency branding. One such niche project, cited by two officials, was a public benefits studio run by GSA’s Technology Transformation Services team, which is a pilot text notification system.

    It sounds like too much progress is being made for the sake of progress.

    We should be hearing about budget concerns rather than these agencies focusing on non-priotity issues.

    I don’t want to start saying that these agencies are bloated or are set up in a way to benefit political partners without any work being done but it seems that way.

    Perhaps it would be better to get people with real passion into the rosters rather than people interested in entertaining the public.




  • I’ve always preferred CSS preprocessing with tools like SASS over frameworks like Tailwind.

    They work extremely well with JS frameworks like React since they’re both pretty much just syntactic upgrades of existing systems rather than an obfuscation of systems that abuse modularity.

    That being said, CSS frameworks are still wonderful, used right they can save a lot of time during early development by outsourcing the majority of design to the framework devs.








  • Wouldn’t that then be the convention organizers paying for marketing? They have people that they want at the convention who don’t necessarily even want to go to the convention in the first place, even to market themselves.

    Is the talent marketing their talent or is the convention paying them in order to create interest in the event?

    In any case, having talent pay to register for an event isn’t something new.


  • What about it? Conventions already do this.

    Want to advertise at the convention? Gotta pay.

    Want to have a booth for your content at the convention? Gotta pay.

    Want to just go to the convention to see the advertisements and booths that companies paid to market to you? Believe it or not, gotta pay.

    Steam does the same shit, pay to list your games, pay to run promotions, and players pay for the game.

    IMO, YouTube is lagging behind on this one.



  • Eli the computer guy […] had this show up in his dashboard: “grow your Channel’s popularity and engagement by promoting your video on YouTube, running a promotion helps attract new viewers who can boost your subscriptions, views, likes, and other engagement” and the way this works is your videos will show up if you pay them. YouTube is trying to get people who make content on YouTube to pay for views now.

    Isn’t this kind of basic in terms of content marketing?

    One entity makes content then pays another company to promote it?

    What else would Luis being doing if he actually had to pay for the storage space YouTube gives him for free? Handing out CDs on the street?

    Is he aware that companies like Pinterest already do this?

    I can’t say that the sudden huge drop in viewership isn’t suspicious though.


  • get rid of these:

    in the JS, this is what tries to redirect you:
    
    location[_0x15ea[0]] != _0x15ea[1] && (location[_0x15ea[2]] = _0x15ea[1] + window[_0x15ea[4]][_0x15ea[2]][_0x15ea[5]](window[_0x15ea[4]][_0x15ea[0]][_0x15ea[3]]));
    
    in the HTML:
    
    <link rel="canonical" href="https://scorecount.com/tennis/" />
    
    <meta property="og:url" content="https://scorecount.com/tennis/" />
    
    <script async src="https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtag/js?id=UA-199625911-1"></script>
    <script>
      window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || [];
      function gtag(){dataLayer.push(arguments);}
      gtag('js', new Date());
    
      gtag('config', 'UA-199625911-1');
    </script>
    <div class="adwrap"></div>
    

    change these to these:

    in the HTML:
    
    https://scorecount.com/tennis/onilne-tennis-scoreboard.jpg
    onilne-tennis-scoreboard.jpg
    
    https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.3.1/jquery.min.js
    jquery.min.js
    
    https://scorecount.com/files/scoreboard300.png
    scoreboard300.png
    

    put all these files in the root folder:

    onilne-tennis-scoreboard.jpg
    jquery.min.js
    scoreboard300.png
    

    Still doesn’t seem to want to update when an action is performed though.

    There is also a “bg.png” but I don’t think that’s causing issues.

    Pretty much everything works except for the score tracking lmfao


  • Since getting married, I’ve been popping in and out of multiplayer games more often as well as more closely curating what single-player games I purchase.

    I enjoy longer narrative-driven, single-player games; they’re like a good book and I aim to be just as bummed out when the game ends as I would be at the end of a work from my favorite novelist.

    But I cook, I clean, I do the shopping, and so I end up with a lot of short periods of free time throughout the day. The newest (but not franchised) multiplayer game is usually what I’ll play if I can come and go at my leisure without provoking the ire of other players.

    I’ve never really wanted to 100% a game, pretty sure that was just FOMO, but every now and again I will want to replay an old game.


  • I was thinking about getting one but then I saw Retroid’s line of products. They run Android instead of using FPGAs so you can play regular Android games (including modern re-releases as well as Steam’s Remote Play) but they dual-boot a stripped-down version of Android for running emulators with better performance.

    Was hella fun playing MediEvil on the flight from the US to India and that was with the Retroid Pocket 2, they have a much larger model out now.