![](https://sopuli.xyz/pictrs/image/3e55b0cf-b9d4-4790-bf89-4ecdcbb01c31.webp)
![](https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/pictrs/image/a18b0c69-23c9-4b2a-b8e0-3aca0172390d.png)
It’s very depending on which apk you want
Seeing as we’re on /c/Piracy, I would assume a paid app, free.
It’s very depending on which apk you want
Seeing as we’re on /c/Piracy, I would assume a paid app, free.
Only use VPN/torrents for extremely new or very obscure shows
Interesting, I would have thought torrents would be better for older stuff due to their theoretically infinite retention. Like, can you find, say, LOTR: The Return of the King on Usenet at the moment? Someone has to have uploaded it in the past ~2 years (retention period) or something for it to be available, right?
FYI SpotDL also downloads from YouTube, it just reads Spotify playlists.
It’s a soft block, though, you can just click on “I’ll fix it next time”
Yes, that’s right. But the point stands, you indeed shouldn’t do such encoding on the GPU, it’s a tradeoff of (fast) speed vs (poor) quality and (big) size. Good for when you need realtime encoding.
DownOnSpot is the only correct answer.
That’s what I thought initially, but it does look like the guy on the left is pointing out the meme deeper in the recursive structure
We’re not necessarily talking about “pop the back open and slam a new one in” batteries a la Nokia 3310, but rather being able to replace a battery at the end of its lifecycle without special expertise and tools, but still, with some amount of effort required.
That’s the requirement at least, but companies are of course free to choose either approach.
According to a draft version of the ecodesign regulation on the EU’s website, batteries should be replaceable “with no tool, a tool or set of tools that is supplied with the product or spare part, or basic tools.”
The “daingert Madelyn” in the last panel is from a CAPTCHA challenge. In case you’re not aware, CAPTCHAs used to present squiggly pseudo-words like that for you to decipher. I suppose they still might, but they used to, too.
And the joke is, well, it was always funny when the two words somehow made sense
Edit: And to totally kill the joke, “daingert” kinda looks/sounds like “dangit” in a southern(?) accent if you squint enough
Dang, that’s a bummer