

The same way that stapling your finger and being shot, are both wounds.
The same way that stapling your finger and being shot, are both wounds.
If there are two correct and common terms; One broad that includes far more severe effects, and one narrow that specifically excludes the worst. Then choosing to use less accurate term is misleading and manipulative, intentionally or not.
And there’s a reason for the two different terms. Concussions (or mild TBI), is a brief dysfunction of the brain. Full TBI is substantial often permanent damage.
Using the term TBI for concussion, is an example of manipulative intensifying language, to make something sound worse than it is.
Concussion, and Traumatic Brain Injury, are two very different diagnosis.
The two shouldn’t be conflated.
Yes. Contrary to current pop-sci thought, it’s not actually useless bunk. Epically when differences reach into 2 digits.
How is Intel still selling 72% of desktop CPUs?
I don’t get it.
This would be interesting.
That would mean if you are training an AI model at home, you can copy any movie show or music you want, legally.
Both parties are in the pocket of the ownership class.
The Democrats seriously would rather see the republic fall to a pro corpo dictatorship, than do anything to address wealth inequality.
Just days ago didn’t he lament how terrible autism is, how destructive it is to whole families? Now he wants to take support away from those families? Being wrong is one thing, this is self contradictory nonsense.
Still sounds more like a browser problem.
Have you tried different browsers?
Which browser are you using?
The answer to your direct question, I don’t know.
But the issue you’re having seems more a browser thing to me. It’s the browser that warns you if you try to leave a page with an uncompleted form or text box.
The headline seems to imply something wrong is happening.
The options they got when hired finally matured, now they can sell them. With the share price cratering for things they can’t control (Musk being a dick) who wouldn’t just cash out? It’s the only thing worth doing in that situation.
He’s in a different room than we are.
For informal spontaneous moments I use a recorder app on my phone.
For real lectures, I do have a real voice recorder like this. If I’m up front it would just be on my desk/table. If not I put it someplace up front; End of the white board tray, or someplace out of the way while being as close to the speaker as possible.
Exactly the same problem.
Either I take notes quickly and can’t read them later, or I take my time and miss at least half of what’s going on.
I record important things on my phone, or use a real voice recorder in a classroom lecture setting.
I haven’t seen it just flat out break the browser like that. I have had bugs and issues with the extension in the past, which is why I switched to the Windows app. My first guess would be un-installing and re-installing the extension.
If that doesn’t work, the app does have “Inverse” split tunneling, where only the listed apps and IPs go through the VPN, nothing else will. It’ll have the same effect as the extension.
Won’t load a specific page, or any page at all?
Of course if one truly can’t afford it, paying for search can seem a luxury.
However I would argue as a counterpoint; If there’s any online service one would consider paying for, it should be search. Search is most literally our “front page to the internet”. It’s our first stop in any quest for information. Even the founders of Google knew early on, that putting adds in search creates a perverse incentive against the best results, favoring instead worse results, so people perform more searches, creating more opportunities to show people adds.
$5 a month isn’t much to know your query will give the results you want, instead of the results advertisers want.
I’d be quite surprised if this turns out to be crap. It’ll be fun at least
That does exist.
Just like the tendency to make things sound worse than they are.
Why use the broader term instead of the more narrow, when both are accurate? Could it be in this case to associate a relatively minor injury with its most extreme version?