Even more impressive when someone lops his hand off and presents it to the machine and gains access to his multiple gigabytes of Stallman x Jobs fanfic.
That implant needs to be the second factor so that the bad guys also need a wrench.
Fuck paywalls.
Unfortunately you still have to give Google money to run Graphene unless you already have a compatible Pixel phone.
On Android these are called Intents and yeah it sounds like Metaface is specifically using the Instagram intent when opening an Instagram URL rather than the default browser intent.
I wasn’t offended, just curious about your visceral reaction.
I think I understand better now, particularly that last bit; I’ve noticed that if I crank up the volume and listen to anything with deep or punchy bass (e.g. hip hop, or metal) that it’s uncomfortable inside my head. Not sure how else to explain that, but I generally use different headphones when I want to experience bass so it’s not a common sensation for me.
People have such varied reactions to stimuli, you’re probably just part of a fraction of the population that has a sensitive vestibular system - which might be related to your superior sense of balance.
Humans are weird. Thanks for the reply.
Are you sure they were actual bone-conducting headphones? I’ve seen quite a few offerings on Scamazon and the like that say bone conducting in the listing but aren’t actually bone conducting.
I wear a BC headset for the entirety of my workday with music playing pretty much constantly at a moderate volume and can carry on a conversation just fine without taking them off, and when I’m listening to a focus playlist (instrumentals, no vocals or high energy songs) I don’t even have to pause playback.
Do you get vertigo normally? This is fascinating to me.
If this is from the perspective of a hobbyist or brand new Python dev, that’s a fair opinion to have, I suppose.
That said, if you’re using Python in a professional capacity, you really need to learn how to use the toolchain properly.
Python packaging and virtual environments are not difficult to understand, and I’d wager based on your comments elsewhere in this thread that your frustrations are born from not taking the time to understand why following the instructions from a fourteen-year-old blog post aren’t working.
99.99% of the time, the fault isn’t with pip, it’s with the maintainer of the broken package you’re trying to use.
Damn it, Norm! You’re supposed to be dead!
Quit screwing around and get back to relaxing in the afterlife, we’ll handle this mess just fine. Or we won’t, and we’ll all see you soon.
I think that’s the purpose of the “next update” part. As long as the ability to refresh that timestamp is gated behind a passphrase (for 5A protection) then it functions as a deadman switch for the canary.
Ironically, if you buy a Google phone (Pixel 6 or later) you can load GrapheneOS and avoid the Google ecosystem entirely.
Sorry to doxx you but I know that’s just an alias address. Your real IP is 127.0.0.1