The critical thing is having unlock and recovery for the model. Without that, it can’t generally be reflashed.
Read that as contraception.
Either way, probably some post rock or blues or cool jazz or something.
When I was young, a massive old upright board tipped over in an old building and actually came down, rusty nail first, on my head. It hit a low horizontal beam I was standing next to and was stopped/deflected just enough that the nail only poked a small scratch in my scalp.
Kind of hard to describe, but I imagine I would not have survived that even without the nail. Still, the nail was just kind of icing on the already massively incredible event chain cake.
As if “Embrace, extend, and extinguish” hadn’t always been a threat. But better late than never.
Well, you could make one out of polycarbonate. Even PE or PA would probably put up a good fight before you could claim it’s (non technically) shattered.
TV pixels were also generally not square. And if the device was a TV and not an actual video monitor (both were used with home computers), it was a little slow and blurry. And overscan existed. There’s a lot of things that will be a bit different when you look at an emulated display.
In practice? Constantly changing hardware with soc vendors that publish nothing and device manufacturers that (have to) keep pushing out new models on a short cycle. Plus many of them have extra shenanigans to keep the bootloader locked so you can’t install a recovery (presuming you had a working one) so you could replace the os. There are some rare exceptions, but the hardware is rare and tedious and not many people can or will work on installable Linux on them.
If you just want to run some Linux userland, there’s ways to do that on top of android, though. Want to get to a Linux like system or run a program? Might be as close as installing a terminal or running adb shell.
Lifeguards hate this one trick
Finding employment is just losing a job with extra steps. Straight to jail.
Sounds bs. Unless their only source was actually Reddit or quora or something.
The movie Brazil features a literal bug in a system as a plot device.
In a developing country rates also go down with civilization as people learn how not to breed like bacteria. But once it’s about choice, that starts to be a good list. I’d almost list safety as a common theme in them. And in Russia… yeah.
And there’s a lot of people in the world that effectively get told this all their life.
Some for things that aren’t even their choice.
Or the yellow-orange apes imaging they’re running them.