The post is here: https://lemmy.ml/post/16965449
In short, they wanted to keep the tabs bookmarked but didn't like working with the bookmarks implementations in conventional browsers
The post is here: https://lemmy.ml/post/16965449
In short, they wanted to keep the tabs bookmarked but didn't like working with the bookmarks implementations in conventional browsers
Summit fits image to screen horizontally, ideal layout for me
Have we as users already given up on self-curation via blocks and filters? It seems an essential consideration for the design of this platform.
The recent wave of posts add nothing new to the discussion that I can tell. Maybe we need a sidebar link to help remind people of the instance federation principles, and perhaps help guide them toward use of the features Lemmy provides?
I appreciate the agnosticism. Preserving federation should never be considered as indicative of any position held by the instance, it's just what's best for the network.
I don't have much to add to the local community but have been really pleased that I'm able to interact with most other instances from this one and plan to donate when I can.
They aren't concerned with deaths, this legislation positions the most harmful and most physically addictive nicotine option as relatively more accessible.
They aren't concerned with nicotine addiction, else NRT gum wouldn't be allowed to stock within reach of children in retail outlets.
They're just NIMBY's, there's nothing else to it.
Unscrupulous companies in this case referring to every car manufacturer, they wouldn't have a systemic incentive to foster an EV monopoly that is anti-consumer and actively stymies the growth of the local EV sector.
If tobacco is still legal to buy at every servo, supermarket and convenience store; and, if Nicorette & Nicabate are still legal to stock within reach of children at those locations; and, if every substance people enjoy legally isn't similarly scrutinized over the generalisation that addiction to anything is itself a medical problem; no, it's not reasonable balance.
It was back around 2018 that I was first learning the ropes in b2b sales, but I do think I felt similarly about people being able to detect parts of what I'd written that were copypasted, not lead-specific. So I just stopped copypasting stuff, wrote short nice genuine emails, opened up to the people that wrote back. Called the ones that didn't. Always hated phone calls beforehand, but some good experiences on a few early calls definitely eased my nervousness.
I remember the first time I had to call the director of a big competitor, he was like "What was that? I can't hear you, I'll have to put the top down. I'm joyriding in my [luxury sports car] right now". I found that extremely funny and it really broke the ice. And once I was able to be casual with him, I found it easy with pretty much everyone.
Literally the state of California would have lower CO2 emissions today if Tesla didn't exist.
In Australia our tobacco strategy was to effectively ban vapes and price cigarettes out of existence.
The impact to date has created two totally new black markets: one for vapes after people realised anyone could just hop on AliExpress to buy them in bulk and resell for a 2000% markup. They are banned for import, but nicotine is a colourless odourless liquid and there are no rapid tests for it, no capacity to do expensive GCMS testing on all the random freight entering the country from China (our biggest trading partner by far).
The other new black market is for "chop chop", the colloquial name for unprocessed tobacco illegally grown and sold by gangs for cheaper than regular cigarettes / RYO tobacco.
There's also been a big increase in violent robberies at tobacco outlets and even gang turf wars over sales of illegally imported or stolen cigarettes. The excise tax is so high that the gangs can extract enormous sales margin and still undercut the market.
Predictably (and contrary to the rest of the western world) tobacco use has gone up nationally over the past couple of years following a significant downtrend lasting several decades. I'm confident that this strategy, which has been bipartisan amongst our 2 major political parties, will be used as a future case study in why prohibition is fucking moronic. It has continuously demonstrated to be a net detriment to public health, in this case related to a totally preventable yet leading cause of premature death and public health spend.
There is literally no logic to it beyond Lovejoy's Law, except for some false manufactured statistics parroted by our leaders which blatantly ignore scientific consensus.
For what it's worth, Mozilla did release a Firefox nightly test build a couple of months ago which included a proof of concept vertical tabs feature: https://www.ghacks.net/2024/04/02/mozilla-released-a-firefox-nightly-test-build-with-vertical-tabs/
Still not clear whether they're gonna implement it properly though
There has been a lot of investment into exhibition matches over the past few years, and into a Major League Cricket domestic competition which started in 2023.
There have been failed attempts at domestic leagues in the past, but MLC is a T20 competition. That's a shorter and more accessible form of the game where a match generally takes around 3 hours to complete.
That could make a difference, because it's a lot easier to keep kids interested for a few hours vs. the more traditional formats that could last anywhere between 8 hours, up to 5 days.
It's only a 1-month season though, 25 matches over the course of July. I should hopefully make it to a few of them!
I use Shotcut for more or less any video operations that require re-encoding. It's great for basic editing but also simple transcoding jobs too