In his video, he shows that the more common answers are actually 42 and 69.
I discards them because they're picked for a reason rather than a human genuinely trying trying to pick a random number, but they're still way more common than 37.
In his video, he shows that the more common answers are actually 42 and 69.
I discards them because they're picked for a reason rather than a human genuinely trying trying to pick a random number, but they're still way more common than 37.
At least on my country contactless with a card only works up to a limit (€50). Beyond that amount you need to input your pin code.
With a phone, no pin code. With a smartwatch either, and that's my preferred way. No need to pull anything out of my pocket.
I think most of them get an older phone from their parents.
There is better: eSIM that let you buy cheap data anywhere in the world.
Revolut offers one, also ubigi which is even cheaper.
This way you don't even need to find out which operator to use in which country.
That might be true for Luxembourg but not for Ireland.
All US big techs have pretty big hubs in Dublin, with engineers.
I suspect the Republic of Ireland doesn't want Northern Ireland either, for the reasons stated in the article.
So I'm not sure why we're even talking about it.
It's been 8 years. If they still need humans to check they'll always need them.
On a docked Steam Deck, yes sure. It's a perfectly good desktop replacement.
On any other PC, I would recommend a traditional distribution over Steam OS.
What about upgrades, are they going to switch everyone to KDE?
Honestly, I don't miss Internet April Fools.
It was funny 20 years ago when Google started doing it, fun to see high quality april fools from big established companies. But it got old very fast.
This is a problem of generative AI. The problem is that it's necessary to have these kind of protections to prevent it to accidentally go full nazi.