I notice this in mine. The electric motor does most of the speed changing work. From stop to start is obvious, but also while changing speeds once moving. The tachometer reads pretty consistent, but the electric motor adds the speed.
fuzzzerd
Ah yes, the old turbo mode button was needed to fix.
Not automated, but I have a regular signal backup to a local folder that occurs nightly. I manually push a copy up to proton drive once a month or so. 🤷♂️
I have a 43" 4K and at that physical size display scaling at 100% is appropriate (despite windows trying to run it at 300% out of the box) and it is legitimately useful. Its effectively four 1080p screens in a grid with no bezel between.
The annoying part is when the kids roll into the party iPad already blasting.
How is it on api availability for third party apps, and further adoption by third party apps?
That seems to be a big driver of Lemmy support, the fact there are lots of apps that support its api. That's what killed kbin, I realize this is a post about its fork, mbin, but similarly does not have much app support.
What's the brand we should look out for?
I suspect it's a bit of both. With agents the review size can be pretty small and easier to digest which leads to more people reviewing, but I suspect it is still more surface level.
That maybe why they did it, but it doesn't really refute the point either.
That would be incredible.
While I agree with you, its that very misunderstanding that bosses and owners have, and they'll fire regular folks and replace with ai. They may suffer lower quality and even catastrophic failures but it will take time for them to realise and rehire people. All those regular folks will be out of work during that time.
Similar to how I have found success with it. Is it revolutionary? No, not at all. But it's a variable sized (big for some use and nonexistent for other use) incremental tool that requires a new skill set to use effectively.
Mix in all of the hype and its easy to see why people are confused and why some get different results.