All keyless start kias and hyundais are/were immune to the Kia boys trick
All keyless start kias and hyundais are/were immune to the Kia boys trick
Only reasonable explanation I can come up with is that I installed it before this requirement was made and my install is grandfathered in
Without a nightly or dev version I’m running bypass paywalls clean from github, persistently on the latest Firefox desktop release. I do not believe it’s signed by Mozilla, but I could be wrong
On mobile that may be the case, but on desktop you can definitely install extensions not signed by Mozilla
I would advise against the water soluble wrapper pods since they’re iirc a major contributor to microplastics in our water
From Tumblr, I’d bet?
Ah you’re right, I just read what I thought was there probably because of the subtext op gave. It was just a university lab in Indiana. The only connection then is that some of the people that worked on it are (assuming here) Chinese
I think your title is misleading. It was a joint effort between a DOE lab and a university lab Chinese lab.
That aside nothing to me really seems to indicate a relationship between the tin catalysts for this and the euv droplets beyond they’re both tin, and small. For euv, they need to be propelled through the air (and liquid? [might be done by the laser, idr]), but this technology it sounds like they’re solids on a substrate.
Being able to make tin particles a controlled size that small may help euv, but I think it’s a bit of a spurious connection.
Manifest v3 is about add-ons or extensions like ad blockers, grease monkey, etc. Manifest v3 gets rid of some features of Manifest v2 that will severely hamper ad blocking. Mozilla has committed to keeping manifest v2 support in addition to v3 as a bypass to this
I don’t mean to poo poo FreeCAD the way I say this, but the vast majority of those features listed are bog-standard cad suite features at least by modern standards.
I’d love to see a FOSS cad suite kill my personal dependency on proprietary solutions, but as best I’m aware the UX is still hugely lacking.
It only affected key start cars, if it was push button start, it was immune to the attack you describe.
I would argue that this title implicitly suggests there’s no genocide in Gaza while the other title doesn’t reach beyond the bounds of Gaza.
As to the “wiki is a bad source” I don’t claim to have any knowledge of that poster’s thoughts, but here’s a couple possibilities I’ve come up with:
They thought it was interesting that the genocide was evident to the “ordinary” person that edits wiki despite them thinking it’s typically a bad source
They are just some random ml user whose opinions on wikipedia don’t strictly match that of the concensus of lemmygrad, hexbear, et. al. Since those instances are more united on that stance than I’ve observed Lemmy.ml to be (right or wrong as they may be, not making a judgment here)