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Only the US variants lack a physical SIM tray.


At least from the Indian experience, I’d wager that tons of iPhones from the US find their way into other countries because it’s way cheaper to get it from there than pay local prices that may include higher customs duties, higher (than US) taxes, etc. It’s possible that a lot of iPhones in Cambodia are/were originally sold in the US.


Travel SIMs are great but so are options. One issue with outfits like Airalo is they often give you an eSIM from a random third country carrier that happens to have a cheap roaming agreement in the country you are in, resulting in your data being routed around the world and 300ms+ pings.


Only the US models lack a physical sim tray.


Where is this mentioned?


In the presentation.


I also had the displeasure of working for Comcast in phone support before I went back to school and this is definitely part of the reason.

Multiple completely different decrepit and kafkaesque billing systems because they were too lazy or incompetent to properly migrate customers over to a unified modern one. IMO, one of the reasons Comcast has had notoriously bad customer support is because their internal systems were so complicated that even reps who wanted to help might have just given up and told you they fixed the issue to get you off the phone.


My 3170Ti will create 512x512 image in about 5-6 seconds with 50 inference steps


Under no circumstance would I apply to any job that required me to record videos of myself as part of the application process.

I’m curious how many people feel the same way.


I haven’t seen the specific announcement this thread is referring to, but it sounds like it will essentially be an extension of the free inflight messaging T-Mobile has long offered on Wi-Fi equipped flights, except that it will work on flights without Wi-Fi. Extremely low bandwidth and limited to only messaging apps, but an extension of a service they already offer.


The free inflight messaging that T-Mobile offered was just a "free offer for customers of T-Mobile" deal on services provided by an in-flight internet provider. Basically a "free doordash premium subscription for chase sapphire reserve customers" type of a deal.

Regardless if you are a T-Mobile customer using that deal or not at all, you join the in-plane WiFi AP, it goes to the captive portal, and there you get options like "tmobile customers offer", "single flight pass", and "monthly flight pass". Once you pick your option and get through it, you have internet access. And regardless which option you went with, you get the exact same type of internet connection as everyone else on that flight.

From what I've personally seen, it was done through GoGo Inflight Internet[0] heavy majority of the time.

0. https://gogoair.com


T-Mobile's plan is "New SpaceX satellites have giant antennas that your smartphone can reach with a puny bandwidth, if you don't have cell signal you can use that satellite connection for messengers and maybe calls". Royal Caribbean's plan is "We have lots of space and power on these giant cruise ships, let's put a couple dedicated Starlink antennas on them to sell better WiFi to our passengers".

Plan 1 won't encroach on plan 2 yet, unless all you care about is Whatsapp.


I’m honestly blown away by the Merck Manuals! How can this resource be so comprehensive and clear yet seemingly never come up in topical searches?

It seems like the most comparable medical version to Cornell’s Legal Information Institute. https://www.law.cornell.edu/


This entire comment is waxing poetic about an imagined loophole that almost no one is actually relying on. If your credit card charge doesn’t go through, nearly every consumer oriented digital subscription simply revokes your access to the product. Neither side has any obligation to continue doing anything. There is no debt to collect on because nothing was delivered. There is no contract that was breached because the purchaser is not obligated to subscribe to future services.


It would make logical sense for it to function like that, but go ahead and test your theory. You will quickly find most places happily continue service for a while while sending bills and threatening collections. This is especially true of those services that are difficult to cancel.


I’ve done this numerous times without problem. It’s one of the great things about virtual credit cards.


The grandparent was not just about subscriptions, but about a solution to the privacy and easy to cancel issue ("just close"), with the parent comment being about issues with payments missed in that case, going beyond subscriptions alone.

And you'd be surprised how some services continue to charge you (and give you the service) if your card stops working. I've had it happen several times when cards expire (due to messy post office service, it's a mess to renew here, plus I often forget to actively go and personally get the new one in time).


But it can affect your credit score and can affect your ability to get future loans.


Please read the whole thread. That's been debunked multiple times.


FWIW, 5G isn’t really to “thank” for increased range. LTE was widely deployed on the 700Mhz band in the early 2010s and line of sight range could easily exceed 10 miles for useable data.


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