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gloog @kbin.social
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Comments 9
What caused the change in electronic terminology?
  • To add to the other answers you've gotten, "cycles" and "hertz" are both still used. The frequency (in Hz) is a count of how many cycles are in a one second period. A datasheet for an electronic device might have the frequency it's compatible with listed on it (typically 60Hz in the US, 50Hz in Europe).

    For some signal processing and protection equipment you'd also see a number of cycles listed on the datasheet - that will always be paired with a "at X Hz" clarification, because it's functionally telling you how long the device takes to operate. For utility line circuit breakers, for example, "3 cycle" and "5 cycle" breakers are the most common options in the US, where 3 cycles translates to "this breaker will be fully open within 3/60 of one second of a trip command."

  • X begins charging new users $1 a year in New Zealand, Philippines
  • Scam bot operators will just use stolen credit cards - or even easier, iTunes gift cards that they get from the victims of their scams - to pay to "prove" that they aren't bot accounts. For the fake followers/interaction bot "services" it increases the cost of operating, but I doubt they spin up a bunch of new accounts for every client - that $1 per account can probably be spread out pretty thin. I don't see this solving the bot problem any more than prioritizing paid account replies did (it didn't work at all for that).

  • US supreme court blocks ‘ghost gun’ makers again from selling at-home kits
  • Technically it's only the fifth circuit that's decided that DV restraining orders don't prohibit gun ownership so far, and the case is part of the current term for SCOTUS. My guess would be that SCOTUS will overrule the 5th circuit while still leaving the "historical analog" test from last year that was the basis of that decision in place, but that's just an assumption on my part.

  • US supreme court blocks ‘ghost gun’ makers again from selling at-home kits
  • Also a layperson, but while the courts may have ruled against certain details of background check requirements (like whether certain kinds of restraining orders can be used to disqualify someone from buying or possessing guns) they have not ruled against background checks being required for gun sales as a concept. The entire purpose of these kits, whether the manufacturer says so or not, is to bypass background check laws by selling something that technically doesn't meet the definition of a firearm but can very easily be modified to become one.

  • And make it pink and blue.
  • Seems to be this one OP who's posting a whole lot of these sorts of "look how edgy I am" memes. Doesn't excuse it, especially when you look at their post history and start seeing some giant red flags.

  • Meh, I'd count that as a win.🤸
  • How does it establish who authored a work? The only thing the blockchain can be guaranteed to prove is who first registered it on said chain, which absolutely doesn't necessarily mean the author. Immutability doesn't do anything to solve the garbage in garbage out problem.

  • Meh, I'd count that as a win.🤸
  • Only if you stretch the definition to the point where you're calling someone's Steam inventory a set of NFTs - yeah, it's a digital record of unique(ish) games & items, but the "on the blockchain" part was the whole thing that defined NFTs. Every single supposed use case I saw for them relied on pretending that a legal problem (licensing, mostly) was a technical limitation.

  • Never mind they never went away, but they're gaining back ground. And they will not stop voluntarily.
  • They're not saying "the gig economy is fascist" here, it's a metaphor. You could argue that it's a slightly clumsy metaphor, I guess, but suggesting that white supremacy is organized differently today than it was in the 20th century isn't that far-fetched. The reference to gig economies is just illustrating sometime else (labor markets) that has very obviously reorganized in that same time frame.