Eventually Firefox will switch to V3 anyway so it's kind of just delaying the inevitable.
It sucks that this is the future of the Internet.
Eventually Firefox will switch to V3 anyway so it's kind of just delaying the inevitable.
It sucks that this is the future of the Internet.
I make sure to take all my financial advice from strangers on the Internet. Nothing could be safer.
Reddit isn't privacy-safe either.
I'd put less bots/more legitimate users as a benefit of lemmy instead of privacy though.
That's exactly what happened, and that's how layoffs always work.
The losses of the horrible decisions of the board/owners/management/etc are paid for by the blood of the workers. It's so wonderful and very fair.
Ouch! That is scary haha I totally would have done the same though. I'm glad I know better now and I make sure to inspect my devices to make sure the battery looks to be good still.
Are you sure about that though? Do you really think they will be held accountable?
I don't think they will be held accountable, they will be hit with a 0.1% fine, even if there are many deaths, and they will move on with their lives.
As is tradition.
I have my PSP 2000, PSP 3000, DSLite, DSi, DSi XL, 3DS XL, and New 3DS XL.
Out of all of those devices, the only ones with bad batteries that were spicy were the PSP 2000, PSP 3000, and 3DS XL. The New 3DS XL was off since 2020 and still had half charge when I powered it on again in 2024, guess I left it fully charged, oops.
How did the battery nearly explode for you? Even with my PSP batteries that were so badly swollen they actually cracked the plastic shell of the battery, I still think they weren't near exploding. Did you charge it while it was super swollen or something?
This is true, but also on the flip side, if you find your Nintendo DS Lite from almost 2 decades ago, and look at it, and the battery hasn't turned spicy yet and you look on the battery and see it was made in China... it's pretty impressive.
The cheap shit on Amazon however, yeah I wouldn't trust it tbh.
Can't wait for them to be hit with their 0.1% fine.
As is tradition.
I mean, they're not wrong. Adobe is untrustworthy, after all.
Technically Mint is based on Ubuntu (this release is based on Ubuntu 24.04 which released earlier this year).
Mint decrapifies Ubuntu by removing things like Snap, I'm going to switch to Mint eventually - honestly maybe even later this year, maybe in December or something.
Those seem like really big hurdles. How can those be worked around?
Is it not possible to trigger a manual block list update?