This is more like "just increase friction". For some people it's more than enough, for others it's barely anything. Personally speaking, I've found that just the act of removing the reddit app from my home screen makes it fairly less likely to be opened, as now I need to open my app drawer.
One pro of the LCDs is that I'm moderately sure they don't flicker (PWM) as (bad) as the OLED ones would.
Source: 99% of oleds cause terrible eye strain. Flicker affects people even when they don't realise it (studied for office workers during the CFL era iirc.)
I'm someone who's fairly sensitive to PWM. Have tried and returned iPhones, Pixels, and similar. Steam's OLED doesn't bother me. I think it's the same screen as the Switch OLED which also doesn't bother me. Wish Apple and Google would buy from that supplier.
But in general you're correct. When given a choice, I'll generally buy IPS when I can.
> Wish Apple and Google would buy from that supplier.
Apple and Google could do something about it if they wanted, even without changing supplier. They clearly don't think it's worth it. That's not surprising coming from Google but I admit I am surprised that Apple has no driver option to reduce flicker.
Most Chinese phone makers nowadays offer settings to reduce OLED flicker greatly, usually at the cost of color accuracy and/or a locked framerate.
That must be a small percentage of the Steam Deck userbase that's impacted by this as I have the OLED model and it does not flicker or cause _me_ eye strain, even when at the absurdly low brightness levels it can reach.
I think there's a lot of proprietary stuff, from Google Play Services to Pixel specific features. A very significant stack of "modern" software layers are proprietary, even on Android.
For better or worse, "person from 1st world country does what they think helps, based on their worldview - but never asks 3rd world recipient" is unfortunately a very common troupe.
(I'm from a 3rd world country and have seen it over and over again.)
Sending things is hard, it does not help asking people in who receives the things. You need to speak with someone who has experience sending things in the way you need to do it. Getting a package from China is not the same thing as sending things from China.
I am the first to acknowledge that I know very little of how things works outside my country. The only reasons I know that is with many failures. When I lived abroad sometimes people feel talked down to when you as an rich outsider tried to understand things. I do not understand the culture or the reasons for things. It did not help asking in because I did not know how to ask the right question.
IMO this deserves a black banner/bar. I genuinely had no idea a single guy was behind MATLAB (or that it was so old). His contribution has been significant, to say the least.
Perhaps an uncommon/unpopular opinion but with the AI like writing style... I unfortunately seriously doubt multiple aspects of this product on multiple grounds.
If someone said "I asked ChatGPT to make a safe Flipper One and pasted it", I'd believe it. Some stuff here... just doesn't make much sense.
Given how many kids are told to just "shut up and eat it" - and/or didn't have extreme pickiness but got DX'ed perhaps as an adult - I'd say there's a ton of research required to even suggest this as a plausible cause (even for a limited number of cases). It might make things worse, but I highly doubt it's causative.
There is a very popular wrestler who works for WWE who goes by the stage name Triple H. Triple H was part of a group called D Generation X, or DX for short. A clothesline is one of the most basic wrestling moves. This is not sport wrestling, but entertainment wrestling.
Honestly I think this is a great idea. My only suggestion is instead of being very nominal, it should be "reasonable" (so $10 and not $1).
It's even possible to directly link this to maintainers/employees - if you can review 10 such AI/real things per hour (likely more if it's AI slop that's easy to detect), you're generating another revenue stream. Now, I have no idea if these guys are based in SF Bay or a 3rd world country with low COL but as an "add on", $100 an hour isn't too shabby (and can be on the "low end" if one's good at spotting AI crap.)
Side note, isn't it possible to have some way to verify if the "vulns" are actual vulns or not? ...Heck why not throw an LLM at it, powered by a single $10 submission fee?
Sounds like a startup idea to me! Admittedly, the friction and the fact that you have to pay would prevent a lot of legitimate people from participation which sucks.
AI is really throwing a wrench in the economics of software development, isn’t it?
Presumably you could do it just fine without paying if you didn't want the $1000 necessarily. Reasonably they'd still give you the $1000 even if you said "I don't want the money but you guys have a problem", and they later figure out you're not a bot and you're actually right.
I believe the company is based in SF, but the developers are all over the world, so $100/hr is probably in the ballpark. Interestingly one of the senior developers is working from prison so his costs are probably a bit lower: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44288937
Technically if you can copy paste the qr code into any qr reader website and manually do it, I think it's possible? Assuming it doesn't change the code very rapidly every few seconds.
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