I live in a country with 10 million people and it works here. But yes there are probably some that don’t have the frequencies.
I live in a country with 10 million people and it works here. But yes there are probably some that don’t have the frequencies.
I would argue you get what you pay for in terms of interoperability and reliability, but I can imagine people willing to trade some of that for a lower price.
Still on zwave which works great. Don’t see the point of this standard which runs over an inferior type of networking and is brought to us by the companies that created the interoperability problem in the first place.
I wonder why both isn’t possible, build some into the chip but leave some DIMMs for upgradeability too at bit lower speed.
Meh, who cares just keep running it if you feel like it. A problem for organizations, maybe, but not individuals.
I still don’t know what this is though? Something Linux specific?
Sounds interesting, care to expand?
The only concrete one I can actually recollect is generating a quote from our quoting tool in Salesforce. I just ended up running my 100+ Salesforce windows in Chrome because it has a good feature where you can name each window so I can see which customers I’m working on in the taskbar. It’s good to have those cordoned off from my normal browsing anyway. So this one doesn’t bother me. For everything else I use Firefox.
This is also true. The majority of the time when something doesn’t work on Firefox and I try to go to Chrome, it doesn’t work there too 😂
Yes it was performance that first got me to switch too. But now I have plenty more reasons.
I encounter this very infrequently. I think I only have 1-2 examples at work. It’s not a huge deal for me to spin up a chrome for those one or two occasions.
Sure I knew that. I just didn’t know if that was a “passkey” or some other private key mechanism.
The password still works.
They are completely inappropriate and dangerous on European roads.
Whoard wlikes wstraberries (couldn’t figure out how to share the same w in the last 2 words in a straight line)
For me, I’d prefer that everyone just adds biometric authentication techniques. A couple websites do this already and it’s great. Many devices have biometrics built in already and if this was widespread I’d certainly have no problem buying a fingerprint reader for my desktop computer.
Still chasing that BBS fix to this day. Lemmy’s not too bad.
Many people who are trying to push lies have an agenda to undermine Wikipedia. Trump, Putin supporters, etc.
I’d pay $30-40 for one, but the asking price now is too much.
Zwave and zigbee have never needed a cloud.