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if anyone that made this sees this, you made a typo on the Dwarf Lanternshark, its not Columbia, its ColOmbia

I love this take, this is software in escence, build something, influence is something every developer should strive for


happiness, i want to master happiness, i want to enjoy my life, be the happiest i can be, for as many prolonged lenghts i can have, recently i was happy for whole month while doing my skydiving course, i plan on doing more of that, once i get bored of it i will find something else but yeah

personal happiness


I wonder how much money they lost just for that comment, at that scale every but counts


That epoch of Google died near on a decade ago now


Thats if its real and its not a phishing exercise to identify the ip address of posters for intelligence gathering purposes. If scan hacker news every few seconds from a variety of different IP addresses, see who is logged on and posting and then see who clicks the honeypot. Simplez!


.…it’s google.com. I’m pretty sure some smart devices ping that to check internet connectivity


No the website which highlighted an anomaly. I could spot something up with a big entity, knock out a website highlighting that when all the while I'm looking to identify the user.


Look! The same phone with better camera!

Great, brb going to throw my old one away and buy this one


Don’t forget you’re on a tech-enthusiast forum. Your “old phone” is most likely less than three years old.

My mother will be thrilled with the new camera, coming from her iPhone 6.


iPhones are increasingly cameras the other features, of which the actual "phone" part is almost trivially unimportant. Personally I'm actually happy about these updates (I've skipped the last many generations) and I really hoped for and got a tele zoom.

Only thing I would have liked different was a slightly bigger phone (for a bigger display).


Sound like it was fun, and now it's boring, was it worth it?


Yes it was fun to be part of it. The cuts were not worth it to me but it was for the company. It's been many years and the company is still around.

It happens to all companies. New executives get hired and they make their points by cost cutting and increasing productivity. Employee morale is not really part of the equation.


> Employee morale is not really part of the equation

If that’s the case they cannot claim to care about productivity.


always


i need a distro that looks like this



fvwm95 is still a thing.


No, it is abandoned. But there are some bugfixes at https://flaterco.com/util/index.html


I think they did the initial business model wrong, they should've started like hearthstone did, a totally free game with free cards, and the possibility to earn more free cards, and add the steam market later on or control the value early so it doesn't shoots up


crazy to think we are watching dead people


No normal sized HDMI sucks, I don't want to buy another adapter, aside from that this looks really cool, can't wait to get one


C'mon, a mini-hdmi<->hdmi cable is 50kr ($5), surely you can just buy one and be done with it, no adapter needed.

https://www.netonnet.se/art/ljud-och-bild/kablar/hdmi-kablar...


You'll need a micro-hdmi cable, not mini.



The cheapest maybe, but don't I need to watch for specs and DRM features and everything?


HDMI to micro-HDMI is just a straight passive adapter - only the physical shape of the port is different, and feature support isn’t really a thing. In this case it’s obviously done because the HDMI connector is annoyingly bulky if you want two of them, though I’m surprised a stacked connector wasn’t a better option.


Stacking is risky, because the end of cables might be unreasonably large, thus two might not fit on top of each other that close. Also HDMI cables tend to be pretty bulky, they might simply strain the board too much?

Or there were no cheap enough stacked port.


Oh that is good to hear, thanks!


As long as the cable supports your preferred "version" of HDMI, it should be fine, that cable supports 1.4.

So it's not rated for 4k, but it will support all the DRM stuff.


Not that it's terribly relevant, as the board doesn't support the DRM stuff anyway.


Sure I can just buy an adapter, but then I have to keep track of the adapter and always deal with an adapter hacking of the board making it more awkward to handle.


You make it sound like they are being unreasonable, but just like USB-Micro to USB-C and X to headphone jack, it's a huge inconvenience when you can't find/don't have it to hand.

I used to lose the Micro to C adapters all the time, I lost the C to headphone for my OnePlus6T while travelling and was unable to find a replacement so no headphone use for me.

Also, I have about 12 Raspberry Pis, as many display devices, a dozen or so other HDMI devices such as consoles etc, and tens of normal sized HDMI cables lying around and they're all compatible.


So just have the adapters plugged into the Pi all the time. I mean, what else would you use them for? Problem solved, no drama.


You're not wrong, but it feels like an unnecessary problem to have, stacking a couple of full size HDMI ports would have been nice, or just putting a single port on since having two on a Pi is kinda unnecessary.


I agree. No idea why they went with micro-hdmi, when mini displayport is more robust, more common, and royalty-free.


Almost certainly because the SoC they are using has native HDMI onboard, and no native DP


> displayport [...] royalty-free.

If I remember correctly (and that's a big if), DisplayPort started royalty-free but then they introduced royalties. From my blurry memory: I checked once many years ago and it was free, but then I checked again a couple of years later and it wasn't exactly free any more. Did it change again? Or am I completely wrong from the start? If someone remembers the history better than I do...


> more common

More common in monitors perhaps, but I don't think I've ever seen a TV with a DP input. Since AFAIK the target market of the RPi is "plug it into a TV, plug a cheap USB keyboard and USB mouse, and you have a working computer", having HDMI output is a requirement.


Exactly, you can solve the dual-display problem via daisy-chaining a couple of DisplayPort monitors instead. Using Micro HDMI was a bad decision in my opinion.


Apple style - just buy more overpriced adapters.


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