They did see the criticism; in fact a lot of it was aimed directly at them. But they thought that they were right.
A spokesperson told Bloomberg that the fee will “help cover the costs of running a separate infrastructure and measuring its effectiveness.” So a significant part of the fee is to pay for measuring it? What’s that phrase about the bureaucracy expanding to meet the needs of the expanding bureaucracy again…?
This is why Sony was making such a big deal about Call of Duty during the discussions about Microsoft acquiring Activision (owners of the Call of Duty franchise). Sony wanted reassurance that the Call of Duty games would still come out on the PlayStation consoles, and not be exclusive to Microsoft’s platforms (Xbox and Windows). When you see that Call of Duty has been the best selling game nearly every year recently, you can understand Sony’s plea.
This exact article was posted here 16 hours ago: https://lemmy.world/post/3034605
This bot should see when a link has already been posted and not duplicate it. Similarly, some kind of automod should prevent the same article being posted twice.
I should have commented in the post that it is not my view and is supposed to initiate discussion. I’ve edited the original post with the following question:
While questioning scientific practices has led to some significant improvements despite heavy criticism at the time, how do we today justify dismissing unpopular/uncomfortable ideas while continuing to make scientific progress?
Very sad to see this level of gatekeeping in a rather small, slow and quiet community. Good luck to you.
As you’ve been very diligent reporting errors and suggesting changes to map data, have you ever considered contributing to OpenStreetMap? You might like helping by using the app Every Door on iOS, for example.
If they’re cross-posted they’ll show up only once (though not all apps support this feature yet). I cross-post when I know something is especially relevant to multiple communities. If I don’t then someone else will, either not cross-posting or using a different source, meaning it will definitely show up multiple times to people.
Can you provide more context? Maybe the posts that are being linked to in that screenshot?
I would argue that OSM doesn’t exist in a bubble and that discussion about other maps and related services is very relevant to OSM.
This was discussed on both communities you posted this two five days ago:
https://yiffit.net/post/884578
https://yiffit.net/post/884575
(Sorry for the yiffit links - Lemmy still does not have server-neutral ways to link to posts)
It’s not directly about OSM but I thought it would be of interest to people here. I certainly found it interesting; it’s good to update my knowledge about a map service I know less about.
So you’re not looking for an audio editor, but rather live recording software that supports multiple simultaneous inputs? The more specific your request for help is, the better suggestions you’ll get.
What features is Audacity missing for your needs?
Is dupeGuru what you’re looking for?
dupeGuru is a tool to find duplicate files on your computer. It can scan either filenames or contents. The filename scan features a fuzzy matching algorithm that can find duplicate filenames even when they are not exactly the same. dupeGuru runs on Mac OS X and Linux.
dupeGuru is good with pictures. It has a special Picture mode that can scan pictures fuzzily, allowing you to find pictures that are similar, but not exactly the same
Hah, likewise :)
This was posted nine hours ago and has discussion: https://lemmy.world/post/2491510
Archive link for this article: https://archive.is/OtCBR
Someone else posted an updated article already. This remains as is.
What are these minimal fees, and what are they for? I’m always skeptical of these online learning providers that imply they are free but don’t quite say as much.