I think this is the way that Linux desktop distributions are endangered, quoting from the article: "... apps and websites will not assume liability when a signal is not provided and assume the lowest age bracket. Any Linux distribution that does not provide an age bracket signal will result in a nerfed internet for their users."
On the Android app, tap the share button at the top of the recording play screen. This lets you export the audio WAV file. Select some other audio player app to share to, such as Podcast Addict, and use that app's Cast feature once it opens.
I'm definitely impressed with the sound ID. One time there was a cacophony of birds singing outside my house at varying distances, and the app was able to identify 6 different bird species within 30 seconds. All 6 suggestions seemed reasonable to me.
We sometimes joke it's hallucinating when it detects something unexpected, but often it was being accurate. I saw my first ever male Blackburnian Warbler a couple weeks ago after Merlin picked it up.
https://news.google.com/ is having trouble for me. Sections aren't loading, with the error "Uh-oh, something went wrong. Please try again." On Android, the Google News app says "No recent articles".
Operational issue - Amazon CloudFront (Global)
Service
Amazon CloudFront
Severity
Informational
RSS
Elevated Error Rates
Jul 18 10:26 AM PDT Between 9:37 AM and 10:13 AM PDT, we experienced elevated error rates for request serviced by the CloudFront Origin Shield and Regional Edge Cache in the US-EAST-1 region. The issue has been resolved and service is operating normally.
> "This can be avoided by having the process listen on localhost, and then have the login flow redirect to localhost (including the token) on successful completion."
I think this is what the AWS Client VPN client for Ubuntu does. So AWS does have the method in their tool set somewhere, though I imagine it's owned by an entirely different team than their CLI.
If this stands and is enforced, will this be the first time ever in the US that an ISP providing internet access to home subscribers is forced by the government to block something?
If this stands and is enforced, will this be the first time ever in the US that an ISP providing internet access to home subscribers is forced by the government to block something?
If this stands and is enforced, will this be the first time ever in the US that an ISP providing internet access to home subscribers is forced by the government to block something?
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