No generation is magically more class conscious than others. We need to educate people and in order to do that we need to read theory.
EmmaGoldman
Boomers and X-ers absolutely do this at least as much as younger generations.
Worse yet, it was his own grandchildren.
Don't bother getting a new budget phone. Pick up a higher end used one and then just put your sim card into it. Sites like Swappa are a great place to get a legitimate used phone in good condition.
Locked phones can ONLY be used on the carrier they're tied to. You cannot take a locked phone to another carrier, or to another country (other than with expensive international roaming plans on the original carrier). Depending on the carrier, they may be able to become "carrier unlockable" after some time period, but that's not always the case, and that doesn't entirely free you. Almost all locked phones (everything other than iPhones and Pixels) will also have their updates "certified" by the carrier, meaning that whichever carrier the phone was originally tied to will arbitrarily slow down or prevent your phone from being updated for months, years, or forever. People who hate updates might think this is a benefit. It is not. We're talking about security updates, not about when an app developer decides to randomly change everything for no reason. There is no legitimate reason for this, it's only done so that carriers can add bloatware, adware, and spyware to the OS updates.
Budget phones like the A14 will often have promotions from carriers that reduce the retail price of the device. These are locked devices, and they will not unlock the device unless you're subscribed for a certain long period of time. If a phone's page on amazon lists any carrier name, it's locked to that carrier for 6-18 months. The unlocked version of the phone is almost always going to be on the high end of the price range, because it's not subsidized by you being stuck on a specific carrier's plan.
You can get access to the primary carrier networks at cheaper rates using a plan from an MVNO (mobile virtual network operator). They utilize the exact same networks, but have negotiated cheaper rates with the main carrier networks. They pass the savings onto you (and cheap out on other stuff like not having physical locations or huge advertising budgets), so you can access that network more affordably. If T-Mobile has good coverage in your area, Mint Mobile might be a good choice, with an unlimited plan for $15/month. Visible uses Verizon's network and offers a similar unlimited plan for $25/month.
??? What do you mean by this?
Wait, are they saying that instead of remotely accessing my own machine, it's running something like a cloud gaming session to access a windows application?
Am I too high for this, or not high enough?
incredible how techbros invented the only way to make a less hierarchical structure more oppressive than the alternative. Libertarianism is a sham.
Not entirely sure about that, Valve is still working on the Deckard headset and have continued filing patents on it.
Valve's biggest problem is, as always, its industrial scale ADHD. They just can't focus and organize enough to complete projects or to follow up on them. Literally everything that comes out of there requires a miracle and a well-respected senior employee just entirely refusing to give up on it for years.
Extremely do not do this.
Was expecting this to begin with "Dahir Insaat Presents"