an e-commerce site wants me to have a business account too. I'm a one person consultancy that only has one phone number (which I barely use full stop) and can't do MFA for 2 accounts with one number so no business account or me.
having grown up with everything shot on film, and standard def tv, the super crisp stuff looks like cheap and usually after school special productions.
if "film grain" is added in post it solves a lot of the look and feel issues, by adding some "atmosphere" to it.
the film "2001" being the odd ball without atmosphere correctly looking sharp as, yet out of place.
wonder how ultra fine/crisp perceptions will change with generations.
He definitely isn't the Starmer I forked out £25 for in the labour leadership contest. Or the Starmer that stumped for Remain
He's chasing some ... poll? ... focus group? ... something ... but yea I don't trust him, and wait and see would be terrifying if I were still in the UK
@inthehands The computer example has been bugging me as there's more to a computer than simply the hardware.
Generalised to tool does job then you can just as easily say the same thing with hammers teaching cabinet making. Is it that someone can't use a hammer to teach cabinet making, or that the hammer can't, with some weird reciprocating friction rig, cut through a piece of material.
without programming skill, or educational software, a teacher could fail both the use/utilize scenarios
@inthehands you "use" something for its designed/intended purpose eg you use socks to cover and keep your feet warm.
"utilizing" something is when you deploy that something in a way other than its design/intended manner eg. you utilize a sock as your bank and keep all your money stashed in it.
now think of all the biz speak that instantly becomes absurd.
@inthehands esp when use and utilize have very different meanings. usually indicates some just trying to sound fancy and ends up sounding properly useless
I always pushed for work lunches or during the day activities, rather than "optional" after work activites. There are so many reasons why this works out better, child care, alcoholism recovery, I'm not getting paid for this time, etc., that lunch events solve.
The Guardian published a study where men who drank with bosses after work made 11% more than those who didn't, women made 14% more.
@thomasfuchs Piece of history that camera Polaroid figured they could continue to sell cheap cameras and people would pay for expensive prints. That didn't work out as planned, despite being (nearly) first to market with a digital camera.
@thomasfuchs I vaguely remember such things. I also remember early ISPs advertising line rations - how many customers they had per line, so that you had an idea of how likely you were to get online when you wanted.