@chunkystyles @rozlav The boot time is indeed kind of annoying. Seems like there ought to be some way to save a memory image, and reload it on startup, and avoid a proper boot.
I just got a pi zero 2w, and read somewhere that they boot faster than the v1 pi zero. We'll see.
But the solution may just be to have a decent battery, and try not to let it ever get to 0%.
14mission
@lord_ryvan @atocci I liked it too. Unfortunately my 3ds broke and I ended up replacing it with a late 2ds, which is mostly fine since most of what I play are old GBA games, and I got a bigger screen that way. But someday I might want to redo Ocarina and then I might care.
Has anyone had any luck with 3D emulation? I tried Citra with colored 3d glasses once, but didn't get too far. But I think frankly I just needed a better computer.
@BrikoX I see your point here.
And I see *their* point. If there are laws referencing antisemitism, the scope of those laws would be expanded w/o rewriting them.
So if employers are legally required to prevent racist speech in a workplace, and antisemitism is included in racism (which it should be), then if we talk politics at lunch and someone criticizes Israel, HR would be required to treat that as inappropriate speech for the workplace if they heard about it.
Assuming that the bill passed and was held up by courts.
Does this sort of thing actually happen? I mean, where a law redefines an English word (that's not specifically a legal term), affecting the scope of other laws?
Usually in practice "clarifying" laws are written more like "for purposes of X, Y means Z", not just directly "Y = Z", as though they owned the dictionary (and as though languages were defined by dictionaries).
Courts definitely have that power. The supreme court has declared that tomatoes are vegetables, for example.
@Aceticon Ok, thx, I did not realize that "hailing on the street" was the essential definition of a Taxi service.
Of course, jurisdictions could easily rewrite their laws to cover app-based hailing if they wanted to.
@ajsadauskas @technology One factual point I'm not clear on--how exactly are Lyft/Uber getting away with operating unlicensed taxi services? Are they just ignoring the law but getting away with it because city governments are tech-enthralled? (But could, theoretically, bust every uber driver for operating a taxi without a license)? Or do they actually have some legal basis for not needing medallions?
@chunkystyles I'm not doing this for practical reasons!
I hacked/rooted/jailbroke or whatever you want to call it a 3DS and that's now my emulation device for GB family games.
(It's a big process; Nintendo naturally didn't make it easy; took most of an evening, but the result was a pretty good device for copying ROMs onto and playing them).