Unrelated

joined 2 years ago
[–] Unrelated 6 points 12 hours ago

Those parking spaces, though... I hope European parking spaces never grow to similar sizes.

[–] Unrelated 7 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

Yeah, and personally, I don't feel any wish to go back to skeuomorphism. It is funny to look back to and feel some nostalgia, but I think it would look cheap now if they did it like 15 years ago. Maybe iOS' glassy-ui will create some elements that people like about it, but they luckily did not move back to busy ui element backgrounds.

I do partially agree with his buttons and app-points. I dislike how we are forced to download apps for everything, including the questionable tracking software.

[–] Unrelated 2 points 1 day ago

I also don't see the point in the 'glass' blob that floats over menu items. I never/rarely (it makes some sense in the camera app) swipe over menu items, and in my opinion just adds a weird and unnecessary animation (even though it's a bit smoother now).

[–] Unrelated 2 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (1 children)

In Oslo you can drive Porsche.

Tap for spoiler"The units are designed by Porsche Design Studio".

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OS_MX3000?wprov=sfti1#Specifications

[–] Unrelated 2 points 5 days ago

For en hyggelig melding, Takk! Jeg ble faktisk ferdig for noen uker siden :)

[–] Unrelated 1 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago) (2 children)

Jeg har raskt blitt veldig norsk på den fronten og sier bare 'hei', 'nei takk' (pose), 'nei takk' (kvittering), og 'hadet bra'!

Jeg vet ikke hvor bra jeg er på skrive, men i dag tar det noe setninger før de fleste finner ut at jeg ikke er norsk. Så tror det skulle gå greit nå på butikken :) jeg måtte også bestå B2 nivå for å kunne studere.

[–] Unrelated 1 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago) (4 children)

Jeg har lært meg norsk for noe år siden. Da noen skulle bytte til engelsk ignorerte jeg det og fortsatt på norsk. Funket ganske bra :) Det var i Oslo.

(Skal si at mitt morsmål er ikke så langt fra norsk)

[–] Unrelated 4 points 2 weeks ago

The Chinese too know how to make unnecessary large cars, unfortunately.

[–] Unrelated 3 points 2 weeks ago

This is not only on the far-right, but generally on the right spectrum. The People's Party is more interested in businesses than actually caring for the environment we live in. This could be seen by the name of the 'Ministry of Climate and Green Growth'. Apart that generally very little is accomplished by this government, I can't really remember Hermans having any meaningful proposals or implementations, except for scraping those things that were in-place or halting discussions with large corporations on their efforts on sustainability.

The Farmer's Party has a complete neglect for any climate issues, and, my sense, is that New Social Contract cares less about climate than the People's Party. And all three of them seem to be willing to give in to Wilders on this front.

[–] Unrelated 2 points 3 weeks ago

The cynic in me directly thought of how this could be a way for Apple to force the Mac App Store on these machines. Granted it is based on a fear, not grounded on something.

[–] Unrelated 6 points 3 weeks ago

If the government's intent is to cut local emissions this could make sense.

[–] Unrelated 3 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

Nice! ~~Where did you learn about this?~~

Found another comment of yours in another thread with this link :) : https://bsky.app/profile/mtamblyn.bsky.social/post/3lpwegcaok223

 

"Als dat niet binnen enkele weken lukt, is de PVV weg."

Ik ben bang dat dit hoopgevender klinkt dan hij zal bedoelen…

 

cross-posted from: https://feddit.nl/post/34588599

Parliament has to vote on it first, but it is another step towards its implementation.

Some relevant sections:

The Norwegian government is now initiating work on a new law that will provide better competitive conditions on the internet in the face of the global tech giants. "The law will give Norwegian consumers greater freedom of choice in the use of digital services," says Karianne Tung, Minister of Digitisation and Public Administration.

"The new rules will strengthen the competitiveness of Norwegian companies and make their services and apps easier to find online," says the Minister of Digitalisation.

The regulations are an implementation of the EU's Digital Markets Act (DMA), which targets digital platform companies with a particularly dominant market position. The Minister of Digitisation says that the government aims to submit a draft law for consultation already this year. She explains that the new rules will make it easier for companies to compete on equal terms.

The regulations will apply to digital platform companies that qualify as so-called "gatekeepers". Today, Amazon, Apple and Meta, among others, are defined as such.

For Norwegian businesses and consumers, this will mean, among other things:

  • Companies will have better access to their own user data from the major platforms.
  • Third-party solutions must be able to work with the major platform owners' systems to a greater extent.
  • Major players can no longer favour their own services over others on their own platforms.
  • It should be easier for consumers to opt out of standard apps and services from the tech giants.
  • Better control of your own data: You will have the right to transfer your own data from one platform to another.

(These are pasts of the text and they are translated using Deepl)

 

Parliament has to vote on it first, but it is another step towards its implementation.

Some relevant sections:

The Norwegian government is now initiating work on a new law that will provide better competitive conditions on the internet in the face of the global tech giants. "The law will give Norwegian consumers greater freedom of choice in the use of digital services," says Karianne Tung, Minister of Digitisation and Public Administration.

"The new rules will strengthen the competitiveness of Norwegian companies and make their services and apps easier to find online," says the Minister of Digitalisation.

The regulations are an implementation of the EU's Digital Markets Act (DMA), which targets digital platform companies with a particularly dominant market position. The Minister of Digitisation says that the government aims to submit a draft law for consultation already this year. She explains that the new rules will make it easier for companies to compete on equal terms.

The regulations will apply to digital platform companies that qualify as so-called "gatekeepers". Today, Amazon, Apple and Meta, among others, are defined as such.

For Norwegian businesses and consumers, this will mean, among other things:

  • Companies will have better access to their own user data from the major platforms.
  • Third-party solutions must be able to work with the major platform owners' systems to a greater extent.
  • Major players can no longer favour their own services over others on their own platforms.
  • It should be easier for consumers to opt out of standard apps and services from the tech giants.
  • Better control of your own data: You will have the right to transfer your own data from one platform to another.

(These are pasts of the text and they are translated using Deepl)

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submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by Unrelated to c/norge@lemmy.world
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submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by Unrelated to c/norge@lemmy.world
 

Ble invitert på en hyggelig lunsj i vårværet i dag.

Der var tidligere president Barack Obama, på besøk hos Hans Majestet Kongen og kronprinsesse Mette-Marit. 

Vi snakket blant annet om den urolige situasjonen i verden, krigen i Ukraina, og mulighetene og utfordringene med bruk av kunstig intelligens.

En hyggelig og god samtale.

Jonas

Just another day in the life of Støre.

Linkedin lenke

 

cross-posted from: https://feddit.nl/post/31913880

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