gestures around Products as a service in general isn't needed, but it's done anyways. Single player games don't need to be always-online and subscription-based. Same with movies. Same with cars. But in the world we live in, everything is becoming X-as-a-service. In this case, it wouldn't surprise me a bit if they purposely built in a chip that would disable or otherwise limit the battery unless the ~~purchaser~~ client continued paying the subscription fee.
wanderingmagus
Stop, I can feel my bones crumbling to dust!
Nonsense, a refined gentleman like Hannibal Lecter would never sully his taste buds with such poor quality product!
Already saw one from MAGA trolls on Xitter about being a sex worker, with a silhouette of her on her knees doing exactly what you think. I don't know why I ever check back on that site anymore when I'm almost entirely moved over to Mastodon and Lemmy.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/israel-parliament-attackers-citizenship-rescinded-law-1.6749567
Note that simply receiving aid is grounds for revoking citizenship in the second link, and in the first, the definition of "terror" is almost as vague as "afraid for my life" defenses in police shootings in the US.
Does... does Harris meet your criterion?
If I could give you some kind of prize I would. Have a meaningless pixel trophy instead, and an upvote: 🏆
How about Mastodon?
Based and fthagn pilled.
Awesome! Linux Mint's welcome page should have given you directions to setting up the built in firewall. If you really want an antivirus, ClamAV is a good one for Linux. However, whether you need one on Linux is actually a complicated question: https://forums.linuxmint.com/viewtopic.php?t=358408
Really depends on your use case, at the end of the day. Good luck, and let us know if you have any questions!
It turns out Google Chrome (via Chromium) includes a default extension which makes extra services available to code running on the *.google.com domains - tweeted about today by Luca Casonato, but the code has been there in the public repo since October 2013 as far as I can tell.
It looks like it's a way to let Google Hangouts (or presumably its modern predecessors) get additional information from the browser, including the current load on the user's CPU. Update: On Hacker News a Googler confirms that the Google Meet "troubleshooting" feature uses this to review CPU utilization
The code doesn't do anything on non-Google domains.
Maybe it's because you tried it on a non Google site? Idk.
You need the > on every line you want to be in the quote format.
> Quote line
>
<- Empty line that's part of the quote> Continuation of the quote after the empty line
^This would appear as: