Their policies on automated updates, garbage QA, and recall history are huge turnoffs. Oh, and attachments to Elon Musk.
SineSwiper
Mexican cartels are the government, so this isn't surprising.
LAION is a database of URLs, gathered from publicly-available data on the Web. Who is "taking" anything?
This new "journalism" site is not doing itself any favors with bullshit headlines like this. And this is not the first wildly inaccurate article I've seen from 404 Media.
Spain is also the size of a single state.
Which means this headline is extreme clickbait.
If Devs was to be believed, it could totally predict the behavior patterns of that single-celled organism 20 seconds into the future. :rollseyes:
I have the data just from car usage alone. It is braindead easy to produce a detailed ROI document proving how much money both the employer and employees are saving from remote work. It's a lot from both sides, and that's not including all of the less tangible benefits, like morale, team building, more focused work with less distractions, etc.
It's not if you follow the money.
Mozilla was quite the memory hog, back in the day. In some respects, it still is, but it's certainly better than this Manifest v3 crap.
Country size has a huge impact on the ability to make sweeping changes to infrastructure and public opinion. A country the size of one US state can do whatever they want and it's not going to take 50 years to implement.
South Korea has broadband everywhere? Sure, they are a rich country the size of Indiana and lacing all of that fiber is trivial compared to the entire land mass of the US, or worse, Russia or China. Governmental demands scale much differently the larger the country, and tax doesn't scale in a 1:1 manner to its land mass.