The year is 2045, after record profits of 18 quadrillion dollars and formal recognition by the UN, the new nation Republic of Google (formerly Cuba) announces closure of its final web product: Google Search.
The year is 2045, after record profits of 18 quadrillion dollars and formal recognition by the UN, the new nation Republic of Google (formerly Cuba) announces closure of its final web product: Google Search.
Shhhh! I accidentally opened this thread while my phone was connected and EVERYTHING IS FINE RECALCULATING ROUTE.
What’s the best way to keep a C-5 running?
Never turn it off.
There’s also SDRUtah.org, WebSDR.org, and KiwiSDR.org. Each has a slightly different interface and following; different bands, antennas, and geographic locations. You really can listen to the world on these.
Except for the part where all that’s been preempted by organizational settings.
Out of the box, Apple does fairly well.
I had no idea these tomatoes start the process at the size of a small sedan.
Lemmy.radio here!
And the skills to use it; they’re not plug-and-play. Get you license and get on the air to hone those skills.
A buddy experienced the exact same issue as OP just the other day. We ran diagnostics and it turns out his computer was running deprecated DNS IPs for a popular ad-blocking DNS provider.
It was DNS.
Ensure you have multiple layers of ad blocking. A winning combination blocks first at the DNS level, then at the browser level, and finally at the element level.
AsGuard DNS, uBlock, and ABP.
I virtually never see ads.
This is just on the outside edge of A Clockwork Orange.
This is what notification profiles were built for. Set it to work/school/whatever and select who you want to get through and notifications are delivered, all else are silenced.
I even have one called “Blackout”. Nothing gets through, no one is approved, everything is silenced—for when I absolutely must not be disturbed.
Computing without databases is like going into a grocery store and all of the items are in one great pile. Sure, given enough time (CPU) and resources (RAM) you could find what you’re looking for, but it’s horribly inefficient.
Instead, things which are similar are grouped together, like the baking aisle (tables) and if you have to get most of the items for a cake, you know it’s on a specific shelf.
From the Wiki: