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@SFWolfeys

GER/ENG/日本語を勉強してる

Katılım Eylül 2024
638 Takip Edilen16 Takipçiler
WB
WB@SFWolfeys·
@HasPause as a German I wouldn't say it's getting better but it's also not *that* bad. for example he's pronouncing the "the" too accurately for it to be German
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WB@SFWolfeys·
@LuftkoppTim @FrameworkPuter yesn't. because it also just leads the customer to not even try to repair it/get it repaired
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Tim 🏳️‍🌈
Tim 🏳️‍🌈@LuftkoppTim·
@SFWolfeys @FrameworkPuter Except that's just not how it works and not how they do it. The only devices they just replace instead of repairing are the small AirPods which is understandable.
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Framework@FrameworkPuter·
What a load of 💩
Big Brain Business@BigBrainBizness

John Ternus, Apple's SVP of Hardware Engineering, explains why Apple deliberately made the iPhone harder to repair, and why the math says it was worth it: In a conversation with MKBHD, John frames the design challenge by asking you to imagine two extremes: "Sometimes for me I find it helpful to kind of think about the book ends. Like if you imagine a product that never fails, right? That just doesn't fail. And on the other end, a product that maybe isn't very reliable but is super easy to repair." His position is clear: "Product that never fails is obviously better for the customer. It's better for the environment." When pushed on whether infinite repairability and infinite durability have to be mutually exclusive, John acknowledges they aren't always, but explains why the tension is real, using the iPhone battery as an example. Batteries wear out. If you want to extend the life of the product, they need to be replaced. But in the early days of iPhone, one of the most common failures wasn't the battery, it was water: "Where you drop it in the pool or you, you know, spill your drink on it and the unit fails. And so, we've been making strides over all those years to get better and better and better in terms of minimizing those failures." That work led Apple to an IP68 rating, the point where customers fish their phones out of lakes after two weeks and find them still working. But there was a cost to achieving that level of durability: "To get the product there, you've got to design a lot of seals, adhesives, other things to make it perform that way, which makes it a little harder to do that battery repair." That's the deliberate tradeoff. Apple chose tighter seals and stronger adhesives, knowing it would make battery replacement more difficult, because the reliability gains were worth it. John argues the math backs this decision: "It's objectively better for the customer to have that reliability and it's ultimately better for the planet because the failure rates since we got to that point have just dropped. It's plummeted, right? The number of repairs that need to happen and every time you're doing a repair, you're bringing in new materials to replace whatever broke." His conclusion reframes the entire repairability debate: "You can actually do the math and figure out there's a threshold at which if I can make it this durable, then it's better to have it a little bit harder to repair because it's going to net out."

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WB@SFWolfeys·
@SurgeonofDepth I literally started it when it had like 1020 episodes or something. best decision I ever made. Just wish I took more time to watch it instead of binging it in just over 2 months ^^'
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WB@SFWolfeys·
@jijiyenlul he's Faker. he'll find a way
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WB@SFWolfeys·
@soggybrocoli when I tried it years ago in the US it tasted like oversweetened bubblegum water 🥴
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nyara
nyara@nyaraVT·
I genuinely believe that people are still way too nice to @_FriedrichMerz I’d prefer having Stromberg as our chancellor.
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WB@SFWolfeys·
@ClaireMPLS "common man's body" and bro is taller than 98% of the world's population
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claire  de  lune
claire de lune@ClaireMPLS·
at first “common man’s body” made me do a double take, but it actually tracks with everything i know about men that they think they have the same body as a professional athlete in peak physical condition
The New York Times@nytimes

From @TheAthletic: How does a 6-foot-2 guard with a common man’s body and an old man’s game become an NBA superstar? It’s going to be very difficult for the Knicks to win it all for the first time since '73. But Jalen Brunson will be the one to lead them. nyti.ms/4d2xF6W

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0⚡7@0_7_user·
Name a bigger downgrade
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WB@SFWolfeys·
@halenhargreevs being better than me at games is not all that difficult so yeah for sure
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🌸(Halen)🌸Hargreaves
🌸(Halen)🌸Hargreaves@halenhargreevs·
Boys: Be honest… Would you date a girl who is better at gaming than you?
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WB@SFWolfeys·
@_lavenderhxze_ I've gotten technical double 5* in the sense that they were within 10 pulls of each other but split into 2 10-pulls. so in my mind that doesn't really count
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WB@SFWolfeys·
@ashveilburger once I get ATK boots for him it's gonna be so over for all the opps
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WB@SFWolfeys·
@nyaraVT I have the same speed and pay 38€ you're getting scammed
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WB@SFWolfeys·
@wokethezip Ashveil is one of the girlies 💅
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WB@SFWolfeys·
@sandbinalover I've been playing for 2.5 years and have never managed that. maybe my acc is bricked after all 😵‍💫
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evie ♡
evie ♡@sandbinalover·
only 8 months of playtime and ive already gotten full 3 stars for the first time in aa godrail be godrail 😭
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WB@SFWolfeys·
@TheInternetFish this is unironically decently close to stuff I actually listen to ^^'
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