Can we have a feature to automatically render typing like this as normal text? 😏
Oh come on that hat doesn't look so... Oh blimey, those shorts though
You're welcome, it's a really good way to inject some new difficulty into a game you already know inside out. Careful about going full rando though, having your weedle evolve into a mewtwo with a 40PP hyper beam might break things a little!
Might I recommend Universal Pokémon Randomizer for your next play through?
Bigger cars also accommodate bigger engines (including hybrid systems and their batteries)
In terms of the ability to accommodate more advanced safety features, yeah. Isn't that the main reason why road cars have grown too?
Science isn't about why, it's about why not?
They are apparently looking to partner with an OEM to build them their own devices, I wonder if that would mean they can hire a full time media person who can do all the public communications so the security guys can focus on what they do best.
As a GrapheneOS user that's my take too. The paranoid security-obsessed developer who is focused on making the best software to the point of being rude and isolationist is not the kind of person I'd want to hang out with but kind of is the person I want doing security work for the device I have all my personal info on. Sure it would be nicer if they weren't so abrasive but I'd rather they channel an angry Linus Torvalds than some slick weasel-wordy Steve Jobs.
I remember some posts from when lemm.ee shut down of moderators recommending locking the old versions of communities so people didn't keep posting to them, it's a bit of a nuclear option but it's an option you have. More critical when the instance is actually going down though.
Ah, I thought I'd seen this story already:
There is one potential downside to the Risk-Based Update System, as highlighted by the folks behind GrapheneOS, a privacy and security-oriented fork of AOSP. In the past, Google gave OEMs a one-month heads-up. Now, they receive several months of advance notice for the larger quarterly updates. This longer window could be problematic, as it gives bad actors more time to potentially find leaked vulnerability details and develop exploits before patches are widely available. While the private ASB is shared securely, it’s accessible to tens of thousands of engineers across dozens of companies, making it conceivable that details could leak to malicious third parties. This remains a hypothetical risk, though, as it would require bad actors to leverage the right exploit on the right devices before they’re patched.
Also free on mobile this week