Wow, that's super awesome! Bookmarked immediately
harry315
That's a teeny tiny bit insane. I love it. Also, after a quick skim, the code's looking very tidy (at least compared to my noob style "good enough for the girls I go out with" code).
threee-deee
It was the service providers' website, vodafone. They had the option to remove the carrier lock for free because the phone was older than 4 years or so.
Unfortunately, no. It's been years since I did this. The phone has been carrier locked by factoria, though.
Alright, trying an ELI5 here.
Big internet platforms like YouTube, Instagram etc. will get new rules in the EU
- Less relevant/targeted ads for minors
- Ads are not allowed to target you based on your gender, ethnicity etc.
- More transparency and more control over which content will get shown to you
- Big internet companies can get sued for the content users upload
- They will implement reporting and delting tools to not get sued
- Maybe we'll see some upload filters
- Instagram will give you a chronological feed
- TikTok will give you some trending stuff within your region
- EU only
if you mean removing a carrier lock, yes I did that. Totally hassle free, it was locked to vodafone germany. I registered the device online, and minutes later any SIM I popped in woked fine
Python calculations run in the Microsoft Cloud
some functionality will be restricted without a paid license [in addition to a Microsoft365 subscription]
saved you from premature excitement
Still too complicated. You would need to dig up the street for that. What about flying cables grabbing the cars individually?
There's this concept of CO2 trading in europe. Basically a very dirty compania buys certificates from cleaner ones (or CO2 negative companies, like that hypothetical tree burying company). These allow dirtycorp. to pollute the air, while giving clean Inc. the ability and the monetary resources to pull CO2 from the air.
But even if they do die, if you always make sure to have enough trees alive, it'll be a net zero.
Also, I'm wondering that no company has started investigating to bury trees into abandoned coal mines yet. Like, take one, give back one for using a few hundred thousand years later.
I'm irritated that they're making it especially hard for small and low budget applications. AFAIK they are what made Unity popular in the first place?
Guess the big studios need more competitive pricing because they will just switch to another engine or build their own if Unity's price model turns out to be too high for them. Small devs won't be able to switch around too much, on the other hand.