Comment on: Zoom to pay $85M for lying about encryption and sending data to Facebook and Google | Ars Technica
HOW could people not trust ZOOM??!?! 😤
9
03 Aug 2021 01:48
u/Boardallday420
in g/technology
Comment on: Firefox lost 50M users since 2019
Firefox is the big gay
30
31 Jul 2021 07:38
u/Boardallday420
in g/technology
Comment on: Facebook now telling users that someone they know is becoming an extremist
🤡🌍
4
01 Jul 2021 21:41
u/Boardallday420
in g/technology
Comment on: Comcast Subscriber Receives DMCA Notice for Downloading Ubuntu
They say the same things about you I'm sure.
3
26 May 2021 17:58
u/Boardallday420
in g/technology
Comment on: China's First 7nm GPU Nears Mass Production, Pics Emerge
Gay.
2
04 Apr 2021 04:49
u/Boardallday420
in g/technology
Comment on: android sends 20x more data to google than ios sends to apple, study says
From what I know apple is more streamlined in their code and software. Like my Note 10 used 50gb of space just for software files. While iphones software used like 8.
3
31 Mar 2021 15:12
u/Boardallday420
in g/technology
The Insane Engineering of the Perseverance Rover. (Landing on Mars right now.)
8 0 comments 18 Feb 2021 19:32 u/Boardallday420 (..) in g/technologyComment on: Only 4 killabutts?!
To interact with the software they had to use long rolls of paper with punch outs if I remember right. They had to go through the entire thing after each flight which took days and find little issues with the trajectory and everything. Was tedious work but was cutting edge for them at the time, to have the computer record and make corrections make system checks on it's own and stuff.
1
15 Feb 2021 01:00
u/Boardallday420
in g/technology
Comment on: Only 4 killabutts?!
It was magnetic rope memory. No transistors. Many expert weavers had to weave the cores by hand. This is a video about it https://youtu.be/dI-JW2UIAG0
..Skip to 3 min
5
14 Feb 2021 22:05
u/Boardallday420
in g/technology
Comment on: Plans for a Mars Sample Return Mission Have Moved to the Next Stage
Interesting they won't be the first pieces of Mars on Earth. There are some ultra rare meteorites found in Antarctica or Greenland that were actually chunks of Mars that got smashed off the planet from an asteroid impact and made it here. They're called Martian Meteorites.
2
01 Jan 2021 15:35
u/Boardallday420
in g/technology
Comment on: Italy's antitrust fines Apple 10 million euros for misleading commercial practices | Reuters
They could probably make more money to just keep doing it and paying the fine each time.
3
30 Nov 2020 13:58
u/Boardallday420
in g/technology
Comment on: Welcome to the future
I have a Samsung Smart Fridge and thus get to enjoy my ice as spheres, usually.
3
27 Nov 2020 13:04
u/Boardallday420
in g/technology