





Actually, Frankenstein was the monster.
Yes, 2500 Calories with a capital C. 2500 Calories = 2 500 000 calories. So the correction is valid, but for some reason being downvoted.
Why is this downvoted? 1kcal = 1000 cal. So 2500kcal = 2500 * 1000 cal.


I’m gonna test the improvements to the subtitles handling and hopefully be a step closer to not needing to rely on Plex.
I live in small apartments and I would know if my cat got on the table or counter, in the very least by the jumping off thump. In fact, it was happening in one particular apartment. IDK why, but he would get on that counter. And yes, usually during the night when nobody is there. Doesn’t happen in the current apartment.
But I haven’t finished the first one yet…
It’s in my backlog since the early 2000s.
Hopefully it doesn’t suddenly evolve inside that glass.


I didn’t know there was an English equivalent of “да нет, наверное”.
Why can’t they just assign order ID number like every other normal food service business?


Apple has its own can of worms, but privacy usually isn’t the issue. At least in comparison to other tech giants.
I think that’s “pissed in”, which is different.


There are plenty of ethical things you can do with $1 billion. It’s the acquisition that’s questionable.


As I said, those are all 1st party applications. I don’t see it anywhere being OS-wide. And what’s “smartlook”? Do you mean Spotlight? I haven’t seen any AI in Spotlight, but I also haven’t installed (the janky) Tahoe yet.


On MacOS, at least for now, AI isn’t prominent at all. I’ve been using an M4 Air for a month before I remembered that Apple Intelligence was a thing and had to google how to use it. So far it only seems to be partially available in 1st party Apple apps which I don’t use anyway.


For every game that breaks compatibility due to anti-cheat there’s 100s more new games that don’t have it and probably run on Linux just fine. So on average, the compatibility always goes up.


Counter point, Bluey with Subway Surfers in the corner.


We are on Lemmy, we don’t count.


There’s usually not enough interesting things happening on the screen to maintain a child’s attention, it’s mostly just conversations. They might look at the screen occasionally but are unlikely to pay much attention.
Source: was children at some point, maybe.