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It used to be a de facto standard in many programs. Since almost no mouse had a scroll wheel, you'd use the space bar or the cursor keys. Spacebar was usually faster, I guess some people still do.

I do this too. The pattern probably dates back to first Unix pagers, or perhaps to the paper era.

Still doing that, also in Thunderbird, to scroll through E-Mails and go to the next one when reaching the end (or pressing "n" or "p" for previous). I even use shift + space to go up again. I thought it was very common. Another alternative, maybe a bit more intuitive is using page up and down buttons.

The estimate cost number is for very large companies with massive overhead bulk. Dump the management overhead, the HR machine and other things smaller companies do not have and this number comes down massively.

The testing procure has been going on for over two years. Including closed circuit testing.

> Including closed circuit testing.

Which is irrelevant on real roads.

"Our product works really well in the lab, it's the real environment that causes problems"


No article has mentioned insurance rates. I would not be surprised if this has consequences for that. I'm not saying this as good or bad but as insurers being cautious as the liability question in civil procedures ultimately comes to them.

In the US there are insurance companies that will give you a discount for each mile you drive with FSD enabled. That should give you an it’s on the impact…

> GNOME Calculator (currency exchange rates),

Which would crash (technically hang) if you blocked it. [0]

[0] https://forums.debian.net/viewtopic.php?p=818264


I stopped at "pgit handled it.". The tldr was appreciated though as now I don't have to sieve though the LLM bloat.

Those are already automated by making your first question "Did you plug it in?", followed by "Did you actually plug it in?". Or industry equivalent. It's not like there wasn't any research into this in the past century.

The strict definition of the Geneva conventions does not include forced displacement but in some parts of the world that is included in the definition of. And legality is a matter of tribunal and none has been held so far.

You are mixing war crime and genocide IMHO.

Doesn't that require line of sight with limited receivers available? Maybe the current positioning is preventing it until the constellation changes. With the constellation that is the craft in respect to the two ground stations in a narrow patch of the US. I could not find anything about throughput rates except for the theoretical maximum but I also suspect that max is only in LEO.

If only there was an agreement in place to help with that. Oh wait, that got canned by someone when started this nonsense.

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