Even still, use nitter or something if you really have to.
Even still, use nitter or something if you really have to.
Man stop linking to twitter
Mindlessly consuming “content” is simply a disease.
Agreed. It’s like a lot of other unhealthy addictions.
I believe there is, for Android Automotive.
Do you mean Android Auto, or Android Automotive (what’s being used here)?
I assumed/got the impression that the latter cost money to integrators (GM) but I guess I don’t know for sure.
Android Auto is “free” to end-users but is different.
Yes, but then everyone started talking about morality.
Why do you think if things are slower it’s because of patents? There are jillions of patents on graphical stuff too.
Why do we care if people support this Nazi platform or its owner?
You might not, I wouldn’t call caring about it pedantic though.
Why are you still using Twitter…?
I’m…not seeing the problem here. I’m fine with there being a minimum before a check is issued as long as the amount is reasonable, and $3 seems pretty reasonable.
That’s how it works with a lot of things, including advertising, referrals, etc.
Maybe I’m missing something?
And it’s likely a good bit less than 3
We were talking about Fullscreen are that you have to skip or watch, which they don’t have (at least not for me)
There’s some ad on the home screen I agree I don’t want but it’s nowhere near as annoying as on Android TV or FireTV. Mostly it just stays out of my way and lets me do things, and that’s it.
I have a bunch of Rokus and never seen that. That sucks
I would say it probably won’t go any worse than being bought by EMC, then by Dell, but at the time they were a darling mostly left alone. Now they’re kind of a dying market.
This didn’t really answer the question.
Unless I’m missing it, nowhere in the article or elsewhere did they say that ads only appeared one time.
They said that ads were served for one particular account 50 times (and presumably have data to back that up but I’m not inclined to give them benefit of the doubt). And that media matters had scrolled/refreshed a bunch of times to see whose ads would be displayed. Which seems reasonable to me.
Then TwitX made some claim about “50 out of 50 billion ads served” or something, which is a disingenuous comparison. This was one example of a problem. No one claimed it was the only example, so why would anyone compare against all ads served anywhere?
Never forget: “Embrace, Extend, Extinguish”
It’s interesting you picked that, since the origins of that phrase is why Mozilla was even founded. And why they worked so damn hard for so many years on web standards.
Under sentencing guidelines they’re very unlikely to be served consecutively. Probably more like 20 years.
It’s an old code, but it checks out