Nope. I don’t talk about myself like that.

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  • 11 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 8th, 2023

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  • Real Autopilot also needs constant attention

    Newer “real” autopilot systems absolutely do not need constant attention. Many of them can do full landing sequences now. The definition would match what people commonly use it for, not what it was “originally”. Most people believe autopilot to be that it pilots itself automatically. There is 0 intuition about what a pilot actually does in the cockpit for most normal people. And technology bares out that thought process as autopilot in it’s modern form can actually do 99% of flying, where take-off and landing isn’t exempted anymore.




  • I don’t like what this bit of information is doing to discussions in Lemmy.

    Cool. That’s fine that you don’t like it. However people have a right to not see what they don’t want to see. If they decide that means it’s lemmy.ml, then that’s their right.

    Just like I have a right to not peer with lemmy.ml if I didn’t want to.

    Hell I have a hard block on ALL Russian and Chinese IP addresses. Not because I have something against the people. But I just don’t want to deal with the headache of accepting traffic from those countries.

    Just because some (or even a majority) of the people on lemmy.ml are fine to interact with doesn’t mean that there isn’t contention from other users and admins on that instance.


  • non-standard functionality of the latter.

    My guy. In the 90’s ALL browsers were non-standard. Even at the protocol level.
    http/0.9 - 1991
    http/1.0 - 1996
    http/1.1 - 1997

    html/1.0 - 1991
    html/2.0 - 1995 revised in 1996, and 97.
    html/3.0 - 1997
    html/4.0 - 1997 revised in 1998, 99, and 2000.

    Then comes all the add-ons like flash, shockwave, etc… Nothing was standard at this time-frame. We threw everything possible into browsers. Toolbars for literally everything (I remember even having winamp controls in my browser).

    https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Evolution_of_HTTP

    Between 1991-1995, these were introduced with a try-and-see approach. A server and a browser would add a feature and see if it got traction.

    Literally sites and browsers would just implement stuff just to implement and see if it became used.

    A lot of recent times (2010’s mostly) has been back peddling the mad rush of just shoving EVERYTHING into browsers. Now I actually fear we’re going to far though… With google removing useful backend stuff for plugins and such. I just hope Firefox never follows suit.