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in the US, we call these 'generics'


guess we'll see in a month


whoever made opening a new tab in safari take three taps, the last of which is in the bottom left of the screen instead of the bottom right, has some explaining to do


In the default “compact” layout, I can open a new tab in two taps by tapping the 3 dots, tap “New tab” from the menu.

One tap by holding the 3 dots and dragging finger to the “new tab” item.

But I didn’t like “compact” so switched to “bottom” layout for Tabs from Settings > Apps > Safari.


For iOS, if you swipe up on the url bar, it shows all your tabs and then you hit the new tab (+) on the bottom left of the screen.

You do have to discover that faster way to do it, and the alternative is three taps.


he didn't say the shooter is MAGA

he said the MAGA folks were desperately trying to characterize him as not MAGA

and I can't imagine how you'd argue that's not how they behaved


read the article?


someone should do a study to determine whether diabetics develop blindness more often when on ozempic

perhaps this is that study


Yes, this is that study:

“Patients with type 2 diabetes who are treated with the drug Ozempic have an increased risk of developing damage to the optic nerve of the eye.”


i thought "acquired" was a good clue


The secret is to watch all your Paramount content through the Prime Video app. Or at least, that has worked well for us on PS5.


The bigger secret is just to self host. Super easy and Plex/Unraid is the way for everyone upset at the changing content landscape

Personally, with family who earns living from entertainment industry, I try to subscribe to some services… but I also download it and just stream locally. People get paid, but in 20 years I still have taken care of my needs.


It isn't as easy as it appears, partly because media formats evolve. As device output quality increases, there's a desire to get the source up as well.

That means old libraries start to contain a jumble of formats and encodings. The maintenance of this can be a pain.

I noticed this first with Apple TV+ where some films were getting provided in HD or HD/3D. If you have to chose between their perfect audio and video or whatever you have in your library its probably going to be what they offer.

I suspect that Apple (as an example) is using media quality and its features, (spatial audio, their immersive video) in part to prop up people wanting to pay for streaming content. It has to not only be more convenient to stream, but consistently beat the socks off what's easily available via torrenting.

Torrent networks and media players might catch up to start including this stuff and making playback as easy as streaming services' native video players (again I am focusing on Apple TV, particularly Apple TV app on Vision Pro as an example) but as far as I can see its not there yet.

I don't think we're looking at only audio and video quality increases but accommodation of variants on 3D, including media that was previously purely 2D reworked for new ways of displaying content with greater perspective that makes viewing more immersive on a deep bench of legacy content.


So you download movies via torrent then save them to a hard drive for the rest of your life?

I honestly don't understand, do you generally just add media to a larger and larger hard drive and then transfer it every couple years to a new one?


Not who you’re replying to, but that’s what I have been doing for about 15 years now.


Some people even have many hard drives work together for capacity and reliability reasons! Storing many documents, not just entertainment!

It can be made into a pipeline where it's exactly like subscribing to a conventional service.. you just 'pay' with maintenance/curation.

No A/B testing, price hikes, or platform strong-arming. Well worth it in my opinion. Avoids all kinds of whims from publishers/co.


I built a home server and can just add drives as needed. Right now I have something like 90TB available, with 30 of that free. Every year I probably add another drive. Soon I’ll have to get a disk shelf for further expansion, but that’s part of the hobby!


> I honestly don't understand, do you generally just add media to a larger and larger hard drive and then transfer it every couple years to a new one?

Not much to understand, it's exactly how you're describing, except maybe with the addition of occasionally encrypting a bunch of it and storing it offsite/cloud-based somewhere so that the 3-2-1 backup strategy is in play.

Netflix's premium plan is $23/mo, a 6TB WD Black HDD is $125 on Amazon, meaning roughly every 5 months for the same price of a Netflix premium subscription, I can increase my storage capacity by 6TB, with some minor added cost of needing the space to use that extra drive, and the power usage costs. And at the end of the day, if I stop paying Netflix my access to all that content goes away; As long as I have sufficient backups, that won't happen with my offline media collection.


Paramount’s PS5 app is an embarrassment, but it’ll play a show from start to finish as long as you don’t exit it or try to rewind or fast forward.

Plex’s PS5 app stutters on all my content unless I dumb it down to a relatively low bitrate and 1080p max. Subtitles are a gamble.


My secret is to watch Paramount content through the TV app on macOS/iOS/iPadOS/tvOS. The Apple video player is a much better experience than any of the current streaming service apps.


It's definitely not a thing in all US high schools. I'm pretty sure yearbooks are the thing most US high schools have.


Might be regional our American English Teacher was from the posh east cost and a "facebook" was what she called it.


I'm pretty sure it does, but I'm also pretty sure it's okay if it doesn't.


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