

I think they prefer barrels


I think they prefer barrels


Currently it’s self reported, but if it’s complied with and then they inevitably say now it needs id they can just block all the self reports until id is provided. This is the same tactic of marginally moving the line that has been happening for years


*after people found out it was tied to USA surveillance


I could nominate some people for further testing with that instrument


I think the main point is being missed, what does it matter even if did have a criminal past? We’re meant to have a rehabilitation focused justice system, which doesn’t work if you exclude ex-offenders from the spaces they need to be in to live. If it didn’t detect him actively committing a crime, then it shouldn’t have been an issue.


This is horrible. People i think tend to equate the poor user interface that a lot of traditional car makers have, with the general idea of a touchscreen. I have 4 buttons on each side of the steering wheel and everything else is touchscreen (or voice command), my air-conditioning controls have a shortcut interface on the screen. I almost have a panic attack getting into a car with all physical controls, at worst in my car I’m searching through the one screen, not hunting through a field of obscure symbols with no standardisation on where anything is, and all those little lights.
If you’re having to spend so much of your trip accessing all those physical controls in a modern car, whilst driving, then your car is poorly designed.


Are you sure it’s not just one person downloading it for each version of Linux they’ve tried to get running? /s
It is good to see the move, been linux gaming for almost 3 years now and never looked back.


Australia has too many electricity distributors shipping profits overseas instead of upgrading the grid


Didn’t you hear, they’ve almost succeeded at nuclear fusion, almost 90 whole seconds of stable fusion, any day now


I hear Boeing ordered 6 of these rockets all ready


Lol, I have virtually the same system, though my Craig is called Dan
Now you’re showing your ignorance - your statement is empirically false.
Now that I have a work laptop, I’ve installed Linux on my home computer and it was simple and runs fantastically - actual results may vary as I work in IT and have grown up with a high tech involved family. However, the hill I’m happy to die on, is the fact that using Excel above a basic level in business, where information needs to be shared with non-technical staff cannot be replicated in Linux, and that Excel is still the best product to do this.
There are still use cases for windows. We have a predominately Linux environment (server and desktop), and a development team that build 80% of our operational software. That team are not fans of windows, but come across quite a few use cases where they have to use it because a 3rd party program won’t run on Linux; or an external connection requires a windows service; or there is no comparable product available on Linux (MS Excel is the one thing keeping me on windows). Even ignorance plays a part, because end users can still have had limited access to technology over their lives and in Australia that usually means windows computers in schools. I deal with staff in their 20’s and 30’s who know nothing of how technology works outside of “push that button and the thing happens”, if that button is a different colour, or shape, or location, shift is over, go home - they don’t care why it’s changed and definitely don’t want to learn a new way to do it. We’re somewhere between American data cowboys and the GDPR when it comes to data safety in Australia, which MS can be BS at and the integration burns more of our teams time than it should, but it’s still a necessary evil - even if it’s just when dealing with customers and vendors
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