GN's Hardware News today featured their upcoming trip to L1T office - I've been wanting to see y'all's day to day working space for awhile. Please show it in the natural state, warts and all! I want to see the land Kreestuh rules with an iron fist and Wendell conjures chaos from!
In Brazil, ISPs are forbidden by law from placing any data limits and HAVE to give at least 70 or 80% of the speed in the contract at all times since 2013. None of them went bankrupt.
And probably none complied to the letter of that law. Such laws are good but they are less good when A. enforcement is difficult and B. regulators are corrupt. I do agree it's better to have the law but laws don't always solve the problem.
i find it funny (maybe a little pathetic) that now the weekends are something I look forward to being over because there's no chance ill get to watch a new Level1 News... I mean Links With Friends video in the evening. Lol
That comment on underprivileged children’s parents pawning the school laptop is all too real. Growing up I would often come home and find multiple things pawned for drug money, so depending on where you are it’s definitely not a good idea
@@xhivo97 It does suck, and I do agree, using that as the reason not to give free laptops is insane. I only mentioned it as there is going to be certain cities and schools where that will be the majority, and maybe those schools should solve the underlying problems first before throwing tax payer money away.
@@MrToast72 Not in America, but I don't see how a $100 Chromebook is throwing away money. Even if technically correct it would be proportionally nothing in comparison to literally any other cost; especially if it's only certain areas that this would happen.
@@xhivo97 man what is it with Americans thinking America is infallible? I personally know an IT worker who runs a school in North Dakota that had over half of his issued Chromebooks not return and apon checking the local pawn shops and Facebook marketplace he found around half of the missing machines were on there. I still agree that this shouldn’t stop education in any way including issuing more laptops. Nor am I saying that it is money wasted, it’s not a waste if it helps at least one child learn. I’m just saying don’t be ignorant to what’s around you just because you don’t see it or experience it.
@MrToast72 Yeah, that america #1 mentality is really weird, especially considering the US has a lot of outdated/nonsensical systems and ways of doing things lol
Based on everything I know about the US, probably. I am constantly amazed at how corrupt basically every level of the US is and regularly wonder how it is people don't revolt.
Fun fact Fairlawn Gig (community broadband in Cleveland) has peering with most major content provider (Apple, Google, Netflix etc). So some of the small providers absolutely do peer! Oh and Anduril Industries already has drone work with border patrol, so thats already a thing.
Y'all should do a video of your own security and privacy tips that you actually use. Something that we could learn from and possibly share with friends/family.
@@Zaf9670 _Oh!_ That was the a video Wendell did about the ASRock X600 Deskmini. He talked about the Nobara Linux distro (re gaming performance, etc) during the latter part of the video. ☺
Yeah he turned me too :) was a fedora user for a year many years ago, and getting back to linux haven't been easier. I did try out every debian type distro and I don't understand why redhat distro is the only one that doest throw me under the buss...
Haha, the name Wendellman sounds like some sort of spooky spirit to me. Like Bloody Mary, but instead, you say his name 3 times into your monitor for him to appear to help you choose a Linux distro or something.
I think they should just bring back the package delivery trains that they used to have under parts of New York because that worked really well back in the olden times, but if you apply modern technology, it would probably be better than dealing with the turbulence around the towers for delivery drones
27:00 The QR code scanning thing for going to the bathroom is some serious dystopia. How long before that is required at work ? Who knew that carrying a little computer with all sorts of sensors and connectivity could lead to so much cancer.
Australian internet stats show 10% of the users use 80% of traffic. Traffic outside on-net elements ie colo, peering etc does cost. Netflix, Akamai, MS etc CDNs are usually given rack space ie $1000 a month with a free fibre crosd connect. ISP want these entities in their colo usually because the big CDN networks buy massive amounts of transit. Meaning traffic cost are measured in the billionth of a cent per MB. Well at least a decade ago. What happens though is shaping/contention is heavily applied, especially to POI's where there is no competition re backhaul. So yes we have "unlimited plans" but that NBN 100mbps tail you have only gets like 512kbps of TC4 bandwidth (like UBR in old QoS terms) Basically most people use very little of their "allocated" bandwidth. Sucks if you live in the country. In the cities its fine because most POI's have enough bandwidth for what the industry calls "leaches".
@18:25 There's a UK parliament and devolved territories (individual countries) except for England (which is not devolved). Devolved territories have their own government institutions but the devolved territories have different powers if compared with each other. Lots of complications in terms of what the devolved powers can legislate and tax. The term UK has different meanings to different bodies, so constitutionally we are "United Kingdom, Scotland and Northern Ireland" where United Kingdom includes England and Wales but colloquially, it can depend on region and context of conversation... and British English (language) is _all_ about the context.
yea. ibm had a school grift then it was apple now its google and certain oems like dell etc. funny watching the same scams happen over and over and who is in or out over the years.
The British Isles is not the best term to use considering the history of that term here in Ireland. Probably better to just call it Britain and Ireland.
Wales Scotland and Northern Ireland are part of the UK but have a devolved government that covers some things like education similar to state level governments in the USA
3:10 in Canada most of our cellular plans are "unlimited", but the advertising is kind of sus. You dig into it and you only get X gigs at full speed then they slow it down so much you can basically only do instant messaging or maybe send emails. Throttling after you get past your data limit is fine but there ALSO needs to be regulations on minimum performance even past wherever the provider draws the line. I'm OK with slower access but access that is essentially unusable for anything practical might as well not exist.
Car and equipment manufacturers should be forced to use open source software and have all the programming and diagnostic functions needed included in the vehicle.
Isn't restarting devices a trick often used by hackers to gain access during boot time activities like preparing network devices? Also isn't that the best way for kernel level patches to take effect? It sounds more like they want to get into your device than anything but I Imagine they are probably correct theres probably a lot of crap happening in memory.
Don't worry Christa, most Brits have no grasp of how the USA works with 50 states having their own laws and then federal law on top of that. Britain is kind of similar, except that 3 of the 4 states have regained some of their lawmaking powers after a couple of hundred years of centralised government. the complicated part is why different states within the union have different powers and why the other state has all the powers. Honestly, we don't understand it either, and that includes our politicians.
About BRICS; fun fact for Ubuntu users: Mark Shuttleworth - and therefore, Canonical Limited - hails from South Africa. After North Korea's allyship with Russia, they could re-name it to BRICKS.
18:34 I don't understand how in the US you can do a thing in one state, walk over the border to another state, do the same thing and get arrested for it.
Because we are a republic. The federal government was granted very little power and the beginning. They’re usurped to much power. The power is supposed to reside at the state level. Think of it as dirty separate countries. For the most part laws are the same from state to state.
Dollars to donuts, I'd bet the the border wall cameras are broken because some grifter of a government contractor won the bid to service them but they figured they could get away barely doing their job and pocketing a massive paycheck. Even if they loose the contract, they will have pulled down a small fortune. In defense you see it all the time where some small LLC sub contracts and gets paid like 5 million dollars to provide 10 people.
In practice it might as well be. Our politics are heavily if not completely regulated by the EU and we implement all of the laws and policies we are asked to despite having a theoretical veto "right" that we have never used.
15:52 what i didnt get was why no one offered to share? I remeber being awkward in school but i could still at least could ask to join in on an experience. But i think teachers shouldnt be writing lectures around luxury access of materials.
Good luck powering off an iOS device since the power off feature still allows for crap like "find my iphone", which I get on some level from like a parental sanity angle when kids lose their stuff, but I'd rather the device power itself entirely rather that lie to me saying that it did a thing that it did not.
The United Kingdom is comprised of Scotland, England, Wales, and Northern Ireland. They each have their own devolved governments responsible for departments like health and education most of the taxation is still run by Westminster.
Fun thing about the Royal Family is they actually own a lot of the countries property, it's not talked about much but there was a debate about separation from the government body. The Royal Family is paid by the government because (insert reasons I don't know), however the ultimately conclusion was don't because most of the British/Scottish/Walsh government buildings where built upon land owned by the Royal Family. The basically realized if they where to do so the leases for the land would be far greater than what the Royal Family is given yearly.
27:00 you can't have kids use their phones to go to the bathroom. Especially when they don't want kids on their phones. Plus you can't prevent a kid from going to the bathroom if they don't have a phone or want to use it for school.
Every kid in Canada is required to have a Laptop .. it used to be by our grade 9... but now i think it's just the earlier or better. but we do provide every child with a "laptop" to go home with after grade 9... My son in his last year of high school had to explain why his steam deck was better than what they provided...lol
I probably am one of the 5 people who's kinda sad that my country has no data cap internet offers. I was looking for a 4G based backup internet my modem could failover to, and paying monthly for something I will use maybe few hours a week at most is a bit too much for me, as I need decent speeds but infrequently.
are there also rules against pay as you go? seems like something along those lines could make sense in the context of a secondary mobile based backup connection
@@SPyoutube42069 I don't think it's due to any legislation. Just that my country(Finland) is quite small, so we have few operators, and by chance/coincidence none of them ever pushed data caps, but always have sold unlimited data as the default ever since the switch from dial-up to ADSL was made in the late 90s. Then it became the expected norm. These also were the Nokia's golden years, so Finnish telecommunications infrastructure was quite advanced for the time. Now the closest thing I can find are those cheap 3-4G connections meant for security/wildlife cameras etc. They do have datacaps, but also very slow speeds(1megabit/s or so). There are "pay as you go" but it's paid by the day and not by the data. You'll be charged a fixed fee if you use the internet on any given day, then for the rest of the day you have unlimited data. That neither works for me, as some days I might only need the backup internet for 5 minutes, and then I would be billed for the entire day.
In regards to the Norway social media age limits and kids, I agree with them, luckily my nephew is smart enough to stay away from social media. Closest he gets is youtube, lol. He watched Socials make his sisters have blow outs, so he's just avoiding that, haha.
The nationwide fibre network in NZ is a monopoly but a regulator sets a fixed price that can be charged to ISPs per customer. It creates a price floor in the market but has also resulted in basically all plans being unlimited data with bandwidth as the differentiation for plan prices
I have never actually been so early to comment that the BOTS are not even here yet... HOW is that a thing? Ah well.... En-GAGE-mint...... Just like the other kind but minty!
16:15 poor girl probably got bullied to tears in this instance. IMO only way for the no-smart phone in class is parents have to band together. Fk I wasn't allowed to have a cell until I moved out at 18.
There are oddly-compelling cases _in support_ of handsets. Namely, for the _one time_ a parent calls their kid in the event of an emergency. But also, if a child is randomly abducted, then if the handset is in a place said kid's captor's didn't check, then the phone is effectively a beacon to declare where the child last was before it was discovered which _could_ lead authorities to the nearby location. For the child, a graphing calculator is a click away and would perform _heaps_ better than anything Texas Instruments had released for children to use. This would also enable _emulation_ of those calculators, so in places where you are forced to use a graphing calculator, you could use the phone for that instead since (at least for Android) there is _one_ particular emulation app which enables this. If the parents are already spending $600 via installments for a phone plan, why then need they spend over a hundo for a calculator?
So if cellphones get taken out of schools all a bad actor has to do is take out the teacher and they have much more time than if all kids had a phone and could alert someone much quicker.
iIm a bit surprised about Ryan's 3-400$ price tag for a smartphone. Are budget smartphones really that much more expensive in the US ? in Europe you can get a good new android phone for under 200€ with 6gb ram, midrange qualcomm chipset and 128gb storage with decent oled screen from Chinese manufacturers like Motorola or Xiaomi.
23:10 Solution: have the smartphone in Airplane mode, only turn Airplane mode off when data access is needed and carry a dumbphone for you know ... the phone bit.🧡💛🧡
I'll take most annoying phrases and falsehoods in political discourse for $500 Alex. Beyond the scope of small groups of people there has never been a true democracy, and in modern parlance Republic=Democracy, they are two words for the exact same thing in common usage and definition.
@@baronvonslambert I'll take "People who don't get jokes for $1000000, Ken" (alex retired in 2020) But, if you want to get pedantic about it, you're assertions are quite incorrect. Throughout history the terms were used pretty much interchangeably, but have never meant the exact same things. This differentiation has been further delineated, in more modern discourse, as countries adopted the name 'republic', but are barely democracies, or have a completely different type of government. The "no true scotsman(democracy/socialism/whatever)", is just a fallacy that people use to counter any possible argument/example that disproves their position, by attempting to limit the definition of words to some vague criteria that nothing could ever actually meet. In my experience, when people say 'true democracy' what they actually mean is "Direct democracy", where the people vote on everything directly. Switzerland is generally considered the closest example of this form of government. By simple definition, any form of government where the people vote, is a democracy. As such, the u.s. is a democracy. As is the U.K., Canada, The peoples republic of china, or even the Union of soviet socialist republics. A republic, by contrast, uses democracy as a mechanism, but differentiates itself from other types of democracies, with broader individual protections and rights, more avenues of recourse for the individual, and stricter controls on government. So, while a republic is a type democracy, not all democracies are republics. I'll stick to not using the terms interchangeably, but you do you boo.
@@The1Elcil It was a joke. But seriously... You kind of answered your own question, "a type of democracy". This is why the terms aren't particularly interchangeable, as there are different types of 'democracy'.
@@chrisbaker8533 a republic means elected representatives it has nothing to do with -- " uses democracy as a mechanism, but differentiates itself from other types of democracies, with broader individual protections and rights, more avenues of recourse for the individual, and stricter controls on government " to clarify, as an American, I directly vote [type of democracy] for certain things and a representative votes for me on other things. This Republic version is to maintain control of the population by the wealthy and was semi-useful before the modern era.
This channel's title game is insane
Holy shit
GN's Hardware News today featured their upcoming trip to L1T office - I've been wanting to see y'all's day to day working space for awhile. Please show it in the natural state, warts and all! I want to see the land Kreestuh rules with an iron fist and Wendell conjures chaos from!
In Brazil, ISPs are forbidden by law from placing any data limits and HAVE to give at least 70 or 80% of the speed in the contract at all times since 2013.
None of them went bankrupt.
And probably none complied to the letter of that law. Such laws are good but they are less good when A. enforcement is difficult and B. regulators are corrupt. I do agree it's better to have the law but laws don't always solve the problem.
Want a subscription to be canceled as fast as possible?
State that you want to cancel, then file a chargeback when they still charge you.
i find it funny (maybe a little pathetic) that now the weekends are something I look forward to being over because there's no chance ill get to watch a new Level1 News... I mean Links With Friends video in the evening. Lol
best show on UA-cam
Lina Khan is on a rampage and I’m loving it! 🎉
That comment on underprivileged children’s parents pawning the school laptop is all too real. Growing up I would often come home and find multiple things pawned for drug money, so depending on where you are it’s definitely not a good idea
Sure this sucks. But using this as a reason _not_ to give free laptops is insane to me.
@@xhivo97 It does suck, and I do agree, using that as the reason not to give free laptops is insane. I only mentioned it as there is going to be certain cities and schools where that will be the majority, and maybe those schools should solve the underlying problems first before throwing tax payer money away.
@@MrToast72 Not in America, but I don't see how a $100 Chromebook is throwing away money. Even if technically correct it would be proportionally nothing in comparison to literally any other cost; especially if it's only certain areas that this would happen.
@@xhivo97 man what is it with Americans thinking America is infallible? I personally know an IT worker who runs a school in North Dakota that had over half of his issued Chromebooks not return and apon checking the local pawn shops and Facebook marketplace he found around half of the missing machines were on there.
I still agree that this shouldn’t stop education in any way including issuing more laptops. Nor am I saying that it is money wasted, it’s not a waste if it helps at least one child learn. I’m just saying don’t be ignorant to what’s around you just because you don’t see it or experience it.
@MrToast72 Yeah, that america #1 mentality is really weird, especially considering the US has a lot of outdated/nonsensical systems and ways of doing things lol
4:05 watching from México: Data caps?! Do we have better internet in México?!!!😮
Maybe not better internet, but probably less BS around buying service.
If you don't have Comcast, then yes.
Based on everything I know about the US, probably. I am constantly amazed at how corrupt basically every level of the US is and regularly wonder how it is people don't revolt.
Fun fact Fairlawn Gig (community broadband in Cleveland) has peering with most major content provider (Apple, Google, Netflix etc). So some of the small providers absolutely do peer! Oh and Anduril Industries already has drone work with border patrol, so thats already a thing.
Thanks for the video.
Had file on onedrive for backup, when I need the data, found out they deleted it all. Thank MS.
Y'all should do a video of your own security and privacy tips that you actually use. Something that we could learn from and possibly share with friends/family.
22:14 Oh by the way -- thank you for turning me onto _Nobara Linux,_ Wendellman. 🙏🏼🤗👍🏼
Was that in this video and I missed it? Or elsewhere?
@@Zaf9670 _Oh!_ That was the a video Wendell did about the ASRock X600 Deskmini. He talked about the Nobara Linux distro (re gaming performance, etc) during the latter part of the video. ☺
Yeah he turned me too :) was a fedora user for a year many years ago, and getting back to linux haven't been easier. I did try out every debian type distro and I don't understand why redhat distro is the only one that doest throw me under the buss...
@ thanks!
Haha, the name Wendellman sounds like some sort of spooky spirit to me. Like Bloody Mary, but instead, you say his name 3 times into your monitor for him to appear to help you choose a Linux distro or something.
In Maine were looking at Prime 6 day shipping.
I think they should just bring back the package delivery trains that they used to have under parts of New York because that worked really well back in the olden times, but if you apply modern technology, it would probably be better than dealing with the turbulence around the towers for delivery drones
Pneumatic pipe post!
definitely one of my favorite news show, even if it rarely impacts me (in the short term)
Power company fiber here 👋🏻 gigabit connection and been happy ever since. 0 data cap
27:00 The QR code scanning thing for going to the bathroom is some serious dystopia. How long before that is required at work ? Who knew that carrying a little computer with all sorts of sensors and connectivity could lead to so much cancer.
If everyone takes a shit on the floor I bet they will stop making them use QR codes.
"no means no (unless its a financial transaction)" is a good idea for a merch item.
QR code to get in the bathroom....I....what?!
Engagement Challenge. Find an episode's worth of GOOD news.
Wendel 2024: "We don't need a border wall, we just need a surveillance state" ;)
Don’t let the kids take the laptops home, problem solved. Give the older students enough time during school to do any research and type up reports.
And
here
we
gooooo
Here for the channel support.
My daily dose of level1 :)
Remind me to edit The Phantom Menace so Palpatine instead says "I will *make it* compatible with democracy!" xD
Engaging engagement, such wow, much algorithm 😊
I like @the.scarlet_witch.official 's engagement because it made me happy to engage with their engagement!
Engagement increase comment.
Australian NBN network has unlimited data plans with provisions for ‘fair use’ policies. Data caps generally only for mobile networks.
Australian internet stats show 10% of the users use 80% of traffic.
Traffic outside on-net elements ie colo, peering etc does cost.
Netflix, Akamai, MS etc CDNs are usually given rack space ie $1000 a month with a free fibre crosd connect. ISP want these entities in their colo usually because the big CDN networks buy massive amounts of transit.
Meaning traffic cost are measured in the billionth of a cent per MB. Well at least a decade ago.
What happens though is shaping/contention is heavily applied, especially to POI's where there is no competition re backhaul.
So yes we have "unlimited plans" but that NBN 100mbps tail you have only gets like 512kbps of TC4 bandwidth (like UBR in old QoS terms)
Basically most people use very little of their "allocated" bandwidth.
Sucks if you live in the country. In the cities its fine because most POI's have enough bandwidth for what the industry calls "leaches".
@@chugs1984 Whole lot of outdated info. The simple fact is i can download 400Mb 24/7 without contention or caps.
@18:25 There's a UK parliament and devolved territories (individual countries) except for England (which is not devolved). Devolved territories have their own government institutions but the devolved territories have different powers if compared with each other. Lots of complications in terms of what the devolved powers can legislate and tax. The term UK has different meanings to different bodies, so constitutionally we are "United Kingdom, Scotland and Northern Ireland" where United Kingdom includes England and Wales but colloquially, it can depend on region and context of conversation... and British English (language) is _all_ about the context.
I think the government needs to nationalize all ISPs as critical infrastructure and provide it as a service to taxpayers.
I'm reminded of a chaos proxy called "Comcast"
You really should look into all the graft that’s going on with tech in schools
yea. ibm had a school grift then it was apple now its google and certain oems like dell etc. funny watching the same scams happen over and over and who is in or out over the years.
If the kid has to use the laptop and then get bullied.
Maybe everyone who's doing that should a negative grade change?
On the border apparently they have seismic sensors that detect ppl walking/driving, that then paired with cameras and Anduril AI system
The British Isles is not the best term to use considering the history of that term here in Ireland. Probably better to just call it Britain and Ireland.
Yes!
Such an excellent title my God
Woo Hoo here we go.
Wales Scotland and Northern Ireland are part of the UK but have a devolved government that covers some things like education similar to state level governments in the USA
45 minute episodes please and thank you. There is still plenty going on worldwide.
It's too much
@@stolenlaptopget an attention span. 45 minutes is not to much for the news. They barely talk about any of the subjects.
I guess I've been raising my kids like norway for 13 years
Have a great week y'all! 👋🏼🤠
“It’s nice to remember…” yeah. Yeah it is.
3:10 in Canada most of our cellular plans are "unlimited", but the advertising is kind of sus. You dig into it and you only get X gigs at full speed then they slow it down so much you can basically only do instant messaging or maybe send emails.
Throttling after you get past your data limit is fine but there ALSO needs to be regulations on minimum performance even past wherever the provider draws the line. I'm OK with slower access but access that is essentially unusable for anything practical might as well not exist.
Car and equipment manufacturers should be forced to use open source software and have all the programming and diagnostic functions needed included in the vehicle.
The call center is in the tunnel.
we need a big beautiful wall.
Thanks ☕️
no to the qos throttling. throttle in the moment of congestion.
Isn't restarting devices a trick often used by hackers to gain access during boot time activities like preparing network devices? Also isn't that the best way for kernel level patches to take effect? It sounds more like they want to get into your device than anything but I Imagine they are probably correct theres probably a lot of crap happening in memory.
Don't worry Christa, most Brits have no grasp of how the USA works with 50 states having their own laws and then federal law on top of that. Britain is kind of similar, except that 3 of the 4 states have regained some of their lawmaking powers after a couple of hundred years of centralised government. the complicated part is why different states within the union have different powers and why the other state has all the powers. Honestly, we don't understand it either, and that includes our politicians.
About BRICS; fun fact for Ubuntu users: Mark Shuttleworth - and therefore, Canonical Limited - hails from South Africa. After North Korea's allyship with Russia, they could re-name it to BRICKS.
18:34 I don't understand how in the US you can do a thing in one state, walk over the border to another state, do the same thing and get arrested for it.
Because we are a republic. The federal government was granted very little power and the beginning. They’re usurped to much power. The power is supposed to reside at the state level. Think of it as dirty separate countries. For the most part laws are the same from state to state.
@@Bob_Smith19 Yeah, we know Cpt Obvious. Its a comment or how retarded your Federal System is and why your 4 page Constitution is a joke.
You guys excited for Steve to come to town???
Dollars to donuts, I'd bet the the border wall cameras are broken because some grifter of a government contractor won the bid to service them but they figured they could get away barely doing their job and pocketing a massive paycheck. Even if they loose the contract, they will have pulled down a small fortune. In defense you see it all the time where some small LLC sub contracts and gets paid like 5 million dollars to provide 10 people.
Norway isn't an EU country 😂
Partially connected though, through EFTA, and the free movement deal covering the Nordic countries.
In practice it might as well be. Our politics are heavily if not completely regulated by the EU and we implement all of the laws and policies we are asked to despite having a theoretical veto "right" that we have never used.
They glow in the dark...
15:52
what i didnt get was why no one offered to share? I remeber being awkward in school but i could still at least could ask to join in on an experience. But i think teachers shouldnt be writing lectures around luxury access of materials.
17:40 That's some serious luggage to bring with ya when emigrating to a new country. 💼
We need Roo,Cricket,Crouton,Toast videos for filler on short news days
what are data caps?
17:00 a graphical calculator also won't sell your data
Good luck powering off an iOS device since the power off feature still allows for crap like "find my iphone", which I get on some level from like a parental sanity angle when kids lose their stuff, but I'd rather the device power itself entirely rather that lie to me saying that it did a thing that it did not.
Peas and carrots. Peas and carrot. We want to eat candy but our parents want lettuce sooo peas and carrots. Peas and carrots.
The United Kingdom is comprised of Scotland, England, Wales, and Northern Ireland. They each have their own devolved governments responsible for departments like health and education most of the taxation is still run by Westminster.
Fun thing about the Royal Family is they actually own a lot of the countries property, it's not talked about much but there was a debate about separation from the government body. The Royal Family is paid by the government because (insert reasons I don't know), however the ultimately conclusion was don't because most of the British/Scottish/Walsh government buildings where built upon land owned by the Royal Family.
The basically realized if they where to do so the leases for the land would be far greater than what the Royal Family is given yearly.
I’m sure pentagon will only use AI on foreign countries.
john deer also only want to lease tractors they just not talking about it with the right to repair problem
27:00 you can't have kids use their phones to go to the bathroom. Especially when they don't want kids on their phones. Plus you can't prevent a kid from going to the bathroom if they don't have a phone or want to use it for school.
20:30 wouldn't this mean that all existing Linux-based software used by the government needs to be upgraded?
2:35 haha
Every kid in Canada is required to have a Laptop .. it used to be by our grade 9... but now i think it's just the earlier or better. but we do provide every child with a "laptop" to go home with after grade 9... My son in his last year of high school had to explain why his steam deck was better than what they provided...lol
I probably am one of the 5 people who's kinda sad that my country has no data cap internet offers. I was looking for a 4G based backup internet my modem could failover to, and paying monthly for something I will use maybe few hours a week at most is a bit too much for me, as I need decent speeds but infrequently.
are there also rules against pay as you go? seems like something along those lines could make sense in the context of a secondary mobile based backup connection
@@SPyoutube42069 I don't think it's due to any legislation. Just that my country(Finland) is quite small, so we have few operators, and by chance/coincidence none of them ever pushed data caps, but always have sold unlimited data as the default ever since the switch from dial-up to ADSL was made in the late 90s. Then it became the expected norm. These also were the Nokia's golden years, so Finnish telecommunications infrastructure was quite advanced for the time.
Now the closest thing I can find are those cheap 3-4G connections meant for security/wildlife cameras etc. They do have datacaps, but also very slow speeds(1megabit/s or so). There are "pay as you go" but it's paid by the day and not by the data. You'll be charged a fixed fee if you use the internet on any given day, then for the rest of the day you have unlimited data. That neither works for me, as some days I might only need the backup internet for 5 minutes, and then I would be billed for the entire day.
DoD still doesn't mean Department of Democracy? I am Dissapointed.
Move to Poland, we have 1Gbit fiber internet for 25usd/m
Without caps :D
Government should have ZERO say so in who can or cannot access the internet or use smartphones. Fight me’
5:45 Ya, get rid of Wall St.
Engagement on..
In regards to the Norway social media age limits and kids, I agree with them, luckily my nephew is smart enough to stay away from social media. Closest he gets is youtube, lol. He watched Socials make his sisters have blow outs, so he's just avoiding that, haha.
Woot!
this is important for increasing funding to intel. intel needs help with making some good gpu's.
I wonder how ISPs would change services or costs if Musk is appointed as US CTO...
Norway is not in the EU.
*shakes head*
Americans ...
Literally no difference, they act exactly like they are. Follows every whim of the agreements and imposed rules but without the voting rights 🚽
Don’t throw us all under the bus. There are plenty of us who know where other countries are on a map and know their political structures.
@@More_Row No. There is a difference. The difference is facts.
The nationwide fibre network in NZ is a monopoly but a regulator sets a fixed price that can be charged to ISPs per customer. It creates a price floor in the market but has also resulted in basically all plans being unlimited data with bandwidth as the differentiation for plan prices
NZ has the population of similar to some large cities in US. Not a good comparison.
@BenState small size doesn't mean that a similar approach wouldn't work at a larger scale though
@@jameswafer8477 The cost of delivering the services is minute compared to a country like Australia or USA. So, yes, it does matter.
The reason Linus removed the people is because he straight up replied with "Of course I hate this ethnicity" when asked why.
27:06 there's an argument for hygiene there to be completely fair, that said it's not like it's stopping them using it on the John in their free time
I have never actually been so early to comment that the BOTS are not even here yet...
HOW is that a thing?
Ah well.... En-GAGE-mint...... Just like the other kind but minty!
16:15 poor girl probably got bullied to tears in this instance. IMO only way for the no-smart phone in class is parents have to band together. Fk I wasn't allowed to have a cell until I moved out at 18.
There are oddly-compelling cases _in support_ of handsets. Namely, for the _one time_ a parent calls their kid in the event of an emergency. But also, if a child is randomly abducted, then if the handset is in a place said kid's captor's didn't check, then the phone is effectively a beacon to declare where the child last was before it was discovered which _could_ lead authorities to the nearby location.
For the child, a graphing calculator is a click away and would perform _heaps_ better than anything Texas Instruments had released for children to use. This would also enable _emulation_ of those calculators, so in places where you are forced to use a graphing calculator, you could use the phone for that instead since (at least for Android) there is _one_ particular emulation app which enables this.
If the parents are already spending $600 via installments for a phone plan, why then need they spend over a hundo for a calculator?
HIPA does not apply to any one else other then Doctor, pharmacist, legal team,
So if cellphones get taken out of schools all a bad actor has to do is take out the teacher and they have much more time than if all kids had a phone and could alert someone much quicker.
iIm a bit surprised about Ryan's 3-400$ price tag for a smartphone. Are budget smartphones really that much more expensive in the US ? in Europe you can get a good new android phone for under 200€ with 6gb ram, midrange qualcomm chipset and 128gb storage with decent oled screen from Chinese manufacturers like Motorola or Xiaomi.
He’s out of touch and most likely only looks at high end phones. You can get a basic Android smartphone for under $200.
Galaxy A05s is around $100...🥰
The NSA says to reboot your phone so their persistence rootkit will setup before the patch! *prepares tinfoil*
@5:29 has anybody written a good book, you ask. Hm. A guy by the name a Dory has written several.
Yay!! 🤗
23:10 Solution: have the smartphone in Airplane mode, only turn Airplane mode off when data access is needed and carry a dumbphone for you know ... the phone bit.🧡💛🧡
Thank goodness we don't have to worry about the pentagon's ai, since we're a republic and not a democracy.
I'll take most annoying phrases and falsehoods in political discourse for $500 Alex.
Beyond the scope of small groups of people there has never been a true democracy, and in modern parlance Republic=Democracy, they are two words for the exact same thing in common usage and definition.
can you explain what you mean by that?
"a republic not a democracy"
I will say first that a republic is a type of democracy.
@@baronvonslambert I'll take "People who don't get jokes for $1000000, Ken"
(alex retired in 2020)
But, if you want to get pedantic about it, you're assertions are quite incorrect.
Throughout history the terms were used pretty much interchangeably, but have never meant the exact same things.
This differentiation has been further delineated, in more modern discourse, as countries adopted the name 'republic', but are barely democracies, or have a completely different type of government.
The "no true scotsman(democracy/socialism/whatever)", is just a fallacy that people use to counter any possible argument/example that disproves their position, by attempting to limit the definition of words to some vague criteria that nothing could ever actually meet.
In my experience, when people say 'true democracy' what they actually mean is "Direct democracy", where the people vote on everything directly. Switzerland is generally considered the closest example of this form of government.
By simple definition, any form of government where the people vote, is a democracy.
As such, the u.s. is a democracy. As is the U.K., Canada, The peoples republic of china, or even the Union of soviet socialist republics.
A republic, by contrast, uses democracy as a mechanism, but differentiates itself from other types of democracies, with broader individual protections and rights, more avenues of recourse for the individual, and stricter controls on government.
So, while a republic is a type democracy, not all democracies are republics.
I'll stick to not using the terms interchangeably, but you do you boo.
@@The1Elcil It was a joke.
But seriously...
You kind of answered your own question, "a type of democracy".
This is why the terms aren't particularly interchangeable, as there are different types of 'democracy'.
@@chrisbaker8533 a republic means elected representatives
it has nothing to do with --
" uses democracy as a mechanism, but differentiates itself from other types of democracies, with broader individual protections and rights, more avenues of recourse for the individual, and stricter controls on government "
to clarify, as an American,
I directly vote [type of democracy] for certain things
and a representative votes for me on other things.
This Republic version is to maintain control of the population by the wealthy and was semi-useful before the modern era.
15:02 He brought a Lababrador girl to a meeting, are you guys midgets if that dogo counts as "giant" now?