Guess what? Optical Microlenses are critical for AI data centers.
That means we can add physical media to the list of things the AI industry has killed alongside affordable hardware.
I heard a women on the radio stating that how wonderful it was to swim in a warm ocean
Almost like being in a hot tub
I am afraid that is what we are up against
People with zero understanding what is happening or that an increasing hot ocean is deadly to life on Earth
u dont think much about it when ur a kid but seeing an entire classroom of children below the age of 6 reciting this shit in monotone makes u realize this country raises people for cult mentality lmao
Once you realize that right-wingers are just adult children with a contrarian/rebellious compulsion, everything starts to make sense.
"Ha! Take that, I lowered it more than you recommended!" like some kid defying their parents' orders.
You know that Parental Controls literally deal with the problem before it happens too, right?
Kids cannot download ANY APPS without you knowing AND your permission.
This is ALREADY an existing feature parents can use.
For people who aren't aware, this is like if they interviewed Jesus himself for getting the Bible adapted into a multi-million dollar feature length film
I really need people to read what the Earth was like just 15,000-20,000 years ago bc you will quickly grasp how much humanity has to become masters of bioengineering & science as a whole if we want our human race to have a CHANCE at surviving this.
Heads up. Sony/PlayStation are taking down any posts on Reddit which prove that they're lying about the physical vs digital sales comparisons and skewing the numbers 👌
The top is a French broadcaster in 2015 showing what temperatures could be by 2050 if we don't take climate change seriously and the bottom is what they are today.
Every politician pushing more oil instead of transitioning to renewable is a short term profit sociopath
What Max is alluding to here, is that the current administration has virtually no consumer protections operation whatsoever, and that's by design, to be as business friendly as possible.
There's also the fact that the Supreme Court is extremely corporate friendly.
So there's no legal avenue in the United States to realistically challenge Sony, or any large multibillion dollar firm.
This is all of a result of our current trend in electoral politics. Who we vote into office matters, and there are downstream effects that you wouldn't normally connect that flow out of who controls the American government.
I know a LOT of people have varied opinions on Max Dood, but on this point, he's actually right.