I use "Apple’s own Health app" medication reminders and from what I can see, they do not use Critical Alerts. They behave differently from the app I use that prompts me of the sugar levels of a relative (that app does use Critical Alerts, and the difference is very clear.)
> "Money is neither created nor destroyed, it simply moves from one hand to another".
With regards to how money is created, you may want to read on credit and how banks create money virtually out of nothing, or how the state has a monopoly on printing money (turning "not money" -- paper and ink -- into "money").
The destroying part is much simpler: you can perform an experiment of burning a banknote yourself.
Homo sapiens is a genus full of anxiety, as our ancestors who didn't "worry about tomorrow" either died from hunger, or got killed by those who did. Anxiety is an evolutionary feature.
I used to think this way. Spent decades justifying it as a motivator. It's a trap.
It made sense if you were risking your life whenever you went to get food. If you're trying to recreate those feelings by undercharging the battery of your smartphone, you're just bored
It doesn’t matter. You’re not trying to recreate anything. Your brain is just wired that way already. You’ve got it from your parents, who got it from their parents, all the way to our predecessors in Africa.
Anything around 20 degC ambient temperature should be fine. More important is that the phone can easily dissipate heat. It should not be covered by blanket or near a heater or in direct sunlight.
I guess you've missed my point, which is: I don't work for my phone. My phone works for me. As such, I shouldn't find myself in the situations where I have to create the optimal conditions for my phone, but rather my phone should somehow accommodate the conditions that I deem optimal for me. The idea that somehow I should provide "cool temperatures" in order to "give a much better lifespan" to my phone while it is "fast charging" ... seems completely idiotic to me. Cooling my room to 20C all year round will incur huge electricity costs, but even if the cost was zero, I don't work for my phone. The other options -- whether slow charge, or replacing the battery, or replacing the phone -- render the option of cooling my home inconvenient to the extreme.
What's bad about this is when these children would need to fit inside a certain circle with other people, who don't behave like machines do. Circle like school, work, or family. These children might have issues accommodating there.
You may then ask, "maybe humans don't need schools, work, or families," but that would be a different conversation.
Modularity hasn't been the proclaimed goal for the Pro line, as far as I can remember. Granted, they were modular once. Today, not so much. The RAM is literally sitting on the die of the chip that includes the CPU and the GPU. This allows for tremendous increases in performance, but RAM upgradeability is sadly out of question.
Q: How do you determine what date it was 180 days ago?
A: Easy! You just spin up a Kubernetes pod with Alpine image, map a couple of files inside, run a bash script of "date" with some parameters, redirect output to a mapped file, and then read the resulting file. That's all. Here's a YAML for you. Configuration, baby!
I wasn’t. This goes to show that when all you have is a YAML hammer, every problem has to look like a YAML-able nail. Still there would be people who would say I’m “blaming my tools” and “everything is covered in chapter 1 of yaml for dummies.”
Fandom Sells Giant Bomb to Independent Creators
In other languages:
ֹֹ»Fandom« Sells »Giant Bomb« to »Independent Creators«