ByteSorcerer

joined 2 years ago
[–] ByteSorcerer@beehaw.org 7 points 6 days ago (1 children)

Depends on viewing conditions. As of yet there isn't an objectively superior display technology.

OLEDs have the best contrast in a dark room as black pixels can be fully turned off, but they are generally less bright and use more power than comparable LCD TVs or monitors (especially when you compare models of a similar price range).

LCD based monitors and TVs can get brighter and can actually achieve a higher contrast in a well lit room as the black pixels on an LCD are less reflective than black pixels on an OLED, and when viewing in daylight the ambient light is more than enough to drown out the backlight bleed.

There are also other smaller pros and cons. OLED for example has a better pixel response time, while IPS LCDs are more colour accurate. Text rendering and other fine graphics also generally look slightly sharper on an LCD than on an OLED display (when comparing displays of equal resolution / pixel density) due to the subpixel layout.

[–] ByteSorcerer@beehaw.org 11 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Any guesses how long it will take for someone to use this jailbreak to get Doom to run on just the CPU?
In theory, at least some of the affected processors should have more than enough cache to run it directly from there, right?

Though I have to admit that I don't understand CPU internals well enough to know if the microcode even has enough control over the chip to make that physically possible.

[–] ByteSorcerer@beehaw.org 3 points 1 month ago (1 children)

It was successfull for a while up to 10 years or so ago, when it was the main free option for video calling. But nowadays there are plenty of alternatives, pretty much all of which do a better job than Skype ever did.

Skype has now been pretty much obsolete for years so I don't think it's too bad that it's ending.

The Google approach would have been to already have killed it in 2004 before it ever even had a chance to be successful.

[–] ByteSorcerer@beehaw.org 3 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Most electric cars are pretty much computers on wheels, and voltages, currents and temperature are constantly monitored. It totally should be possible to log battery health and diagnostic information and generate a battery health report for when the vehicle is sold. But standards would need to be put in place for that to force manufacturers to implement it and to make sure the results are actually meaningful.

Unfortunately Tesla's specifically really don't feel like they're designed to last when looking at their materials choices and build quality (either that or my manager just bought a particularly bad sample, I have to admit it's the only Tesla I ever been inside of) so I don't think having a good reseller experience or longevity is really a part of their business model.

[–] ByteSorcerer@beehaw.org 3 points 1 month ago

Where I live tips are optional and given as a thanks for good service, and often calculated by rounding up the bill to a whole number instead of calculating a percentage.

Waiters still make a liveable wage without them here, though it can still happen that on a good night they get more from tips than from their wage.

I have a family member who works as a waiter, and there they collect the tips together and share them equally amongst the staff working in the restaurant at the end of the shift. So in this restaurant, the cooks do benefit from it as well. Though there is no legal framework for this so not even restaurant does this.

[–] ByteSorcerer@beehaw.org 8 points 1 month ago (8 children)

The battery is still a big problem when selling on the used market because there's not really a way to see how much it has been abused, and it's also not really feasible to replace. If the previous owner abused their battery by constantly fast charging, and always charging it to 100% and driving till the battery is completely empty, then the battery can decrease much faster.

My manager has recently bought a used Tesla model 3, and the battery had been abused so much that he only has about 150km of actual range on a full battery. With the advertised range being close to 500km and the car being only 5 years old that seems to be a lot more than 2% per year. Even if you assume that the effective range when new was only half of the advertised range, then that battery has lost nearly 40% of its capacity in 5 years.