Dan seems to have trouble sticking with a single project. Sometimes it feels like he announces some new thing every week that never gets finished.
Dan seems to have trouble sticking with a single project. Sometimes it feels like he announces some new thing every week that never gets finished.
- Stack Overflow
8.1 used build numbers 9xxx (7 used 7xxx, 8 used 8xxx, and 10 started out using 10xxx), so you could argue it was technically Windows 9.
What a strange thing to do
The only FE that had a headphone jack was the Note FE, and that was in 2017. Every other FE phone has just been a cheaper S series option.
The Note FE was also just a rebranded Note7 with a smaller battery.
Projectivy is great. Some bugs here and there, but overall I love the much simpler UI and that I can actually keep my “continue watching” row at the top.
The screen would get smashed immediately.
It’s true. Add scrolling of non-focused windows and it’s unbeatable.
I think that’s just a gradient that spans all bubbles
Techno might be unknown, because that’s a genre of music, but I’ve definitely seen the Tecno name around.
Sometimes they’re fun, sometimes friends play them and you want to join?
That’s not how it was done before, though. It wouldn’t download update A, start installing A, then trigger downloading update B while A was installing. A would have to finish installing before B could even start downloading.
Especially for smaller updates, the overhead of the network handshaking to start the download can actually make doing 3/4 downloads at once faster than sequencing them. For larger updates, it matters less, but it’s not a negative.
You can still use an app while the update is downloading. You only can’t while the update is installing, and installations still have to happen sequentially (limitation of Android). It only really matters if you want to specifically use an update right away, but then you can just manually trigger the update for just that app.
So you would say they’re comparable then? Maybe even analogous?
Except when it is actually decimal
I could theoretically see an AI model being useful for ANC that doesn’t just block out steady noise but can also try to predict rhythmic and varying sounds, but I don’t think anyone’s actually done that yet.
Tensor is just the brand name for Google’s in-house-designed processors.
Depending on your email provider, you should be able to set up a filter that automatically marks matching emails as read or archives/deletes them.
The bird.makeup instance is a one-way Twitter mirror, but it’s not always very reliable since Twitter keeps making it harder to use Twitter
Not nearly text-based enough