Some apps have weird names and I forget what they’re called. Showing a “new” badge, even if it’s just for the first few times I open the app, makes it more likely that I’ll remember the app’s name.
Aussie living in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Coding since 1998.
.NET Foundation member. C# fan
https://d.sb/
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dan@upvote.auto Technology@lemmy.world•Trump’s Defiance of TikTok Ban Prompted Immunity Promises to 10 Tech CompaniesEnglish4·8 days agoI’m confused as to why T-Mobile is on that list but neither AT&T nor Verizon are.
dan@upvote.auto Not The Onion@lemmy.world•Tesla Will Now Let You Finance Your EV Repairs… With Interest Rates as High as 36% APREnglish1·8 days agoA lot of restaurants add on an extra fee if you pay by card
In the US, this is pretty recent… It’s only been allowed since last year. Previously, MasterCard and Visa’s merchant agreements both said that merchants must not charge a fee for paying by card, and the store could have their MC/Visa agreement terminated if they were caught charging fees. Some stores got around this by offering a cash discount rather than charging a fee for cards. There was a big lawsuit and the rules got changed as a result.
In Australia, there’s a lot of rules around card fees/surcharges. I linked to an article in my previous comment. The business can’t charge more than it costs them to process card payments, and they’re only allowed to list it as a separate fee if they have a fee-free way of paying (like with cash). If they only take card, they need to include the card fee in the advertised prices.
dan@upvote.auto Not The Onion@lemmy.world•Tesla Will Now Let You Finance Your EV Repairs… With Interest Rates as High as 36% APREnglish2·8 days agoThis is one of the reasons merchant fees are so high in the USA.
In Australia, merchant fees for a medium-sized business are an average of 0.75 to 1.5% for credit cards and 0.25% to 1% for debit cards, according to the Reserve Bank of Australia (https://www.accc.gov.au/consumers/pricing/card-surcharges).
In the USA they’re often over double that. Some payment processors charge 3% or more for credit card processing.
dan@upvote.auto News@lemmy.world•Bhad Bhabie Sued by American Express for $674K of Alleged Unpaid Credit Card Debt10·8 days agoWho actually cares about this, though?
dan@upvote.auto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Introducing reitti: a selfhosted alternative to Google TimelineEnglish3·8 days agoI’d love to see an integration with PhotoStructure in addition to Immich.
dan@upvote.auto Not The Onion@lemmy.world•Tesla Will Now Let You Finance Your EV Repairs… With Interest Rates as High as 36% APREnglish10·8 days agoIf this was done in the USA, a lot of airlines would struggle or even collapse if they couldn’t figure out how to adapt.
The four biggest airlines in the US (United, Delta, American and Southwest) all lose money on flights. The way they make a profit is through their co-branded credit cards. The banks pay the airlines to purchase miles from them to use as points, and one of the primary ways the bank makes the money to do that is from interest payments.
I’m not saying that interest rates shouldn’t be limited, just that there’d be some major impact since a lot of the financial industry is funded by interest payments.
dan@upvote.auto Technology@lemmy.world•PSA: Stop Using These Fire-Prone Anker Power Banks Right NowEnglish6·11 days agoTheir products are still solid. Any brand can have issues with their batteries (other companies use the same cells), and I don’t see a reason to avoid their non-battery products like cables and chargers.
dan@upvote.auto Technology@lemmy.world•PSA: Stop Using These Fire-Prone Anker Power Banks Right NowEnglish5·11 days agoI’ve got a PowerCore 20000k (20Ah). I wonder why the 10Ah version is “fire-prone” but the 20Ah version isn’t.
Good catch - I should have said that it’s closer to Windows-style ACLs rather than implying that it’s actually the same.
dan@upvote.auto News@lemmy.world•Trump still would have won in 2024 even if everyone had turned out to vote, Pew finds1·14 days agoAnd no, it’s not random.
In that case, the data is practically meaningless :D
dan@upvote.auto News@lemmy.world•Trump still would have won in 2024 even if everyone had turned out to vote, Pew finds1·14 days agoI don’t know how participants in polls are selected, so I’m not really qualified to make assumptions about it.
dan@upvote.auto News@lemmy.world•Supreme Court upholds Texas' age verification law for porn sites4·14 days agodon’t use their DNS
As long as you use encrypted DNS, like DoH (DNS over HTTPS). Regular DNS is unencrypted, so the ISP can trivially collect data even if you use a custom recursive server (either your own or a public one like Cloudflare, Quad9, etc).
Running a recursor on a VPS then querying it using DoH seems like a reasonable approach to me. I’ve got an AdGuard Home server on my home network that uses DoH for all upstream DNS queries, but I’m currently just using Quad9 rather than my own recursor.
dan@upvote.auto News@lemmy.world•Trump still would have won in 2024 even if everyone had turned out to vote, Pew finds1·14 days agoYou really don’t need to survey many people to get statistically significant results, assuming your sample is truly random. For a population of 340 million, you only need to randomly sample ~2500 people to get a 95% confidence interval with a 2% margin of error.
A sample of 9000 people would get you closer to a 99%+ confidence interval.
Windows perms are pretty locked down though. Sometimes I can’t delete my own files because I need permission from “Administrator” :/
You can actually use Windows-style permissions (ACLs) on Linux via
setfacl
.
dan@upvote.auto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Linkwarden (v2.11.0) - open-source collaborative bookmark manager to collect, organize, and preserve webpages, articles, and documents (tons of new features!) 🚀English14·14 days agoHow’s it compare to Hoarder/Karakeep?
dan@upvote.auto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Google killed Maps Timeline, so I self-hosted a better one [OwnTracks]English16·19 days agoBecause of various privacy legislation, and people not wanting Google to track them as much, they stopped syncing the data to Google servers. As someone who’s worked at big tech companies, my guess would be that storing so many people’s location history was flagged as an issue during a privacy audit.
It’s entirely local now. You can enable encrypted backups and back up the data, however you can really only have the data on one device now, and the web version is gone.
dan@upvote.auto Technology@lemmy.world•Linus Torvalds and Bill Gates Meet for the First Time EverEnglish3·19 days ago(no taxes on charities).
What type of taxes are you talking about?
The mentioned products have had major releases recently. Has anything major happened with Proxmox recently?