Tariffs in general aren't inherently bad if they protect domestic interests, especially against a foreign power that is subsidizing production as part of an economic power play. If Trump had limited his tariffs to China and Russia not included all of our allies I would have agreed with him. If we didn't desperately need more EVs and if US automakers weren't such colossal assholes about making good cheap EVs I'd agree with this one
Oh ho ho, where have you been that you think they'll hold their own side to this standard?
Funny thing is they aren't even GMOs, they're hybrids between tetraploid and diploid watermelon cultivars. You could do it yourself in your backyard if you can find tetraploid seed for sale, or make it yourself with colchicine
Not to beat a dead horse but do you know how we get/got novel variation in crops before targeted DNA technology? It mostly wasn't wild germpasm unless you happen to work with a crop with large amounts of historically documented pools, e.g. corn and wheat. No, most historical breeding programs use mutagens, either chemical or sometimes radioactive, to cause novel variation, grow the seed, see what looks interesting and not too weird, and cross it back into your gene pool. GMOs are significantly less mad science-y than what they replace.
As I understood it, VPNs don't work in this threat model because it's essentially routing traffic through a compromised router before it ever reaches the VPN, so the VPN acts normally but there's a snooper before you ever connect to it
2001: A Space Odyssey is a fantastic Asimovesque sci-fi exploration of what happens when an entity that believes itself infallible discoveres a flaw in itself, sandwiched in the middle of a fever dream with little relevance to the story itself.
Hand waving the precise how of advanced technology is better than drafting full mechanisms unless you have extensive practical knowledge and don't mind dating your work
https://freesewing.org/ has somewhat limited patterns but they're flexible and a really cool project!
The point is that iPhone users are locked into (or strongly penalized for not using) Apple services like Apple wallet and storage and other apple devices like apple watches or earbuds, rather than competing openly. My partner has an iPhone and the hoops we have to jump through to get some--not all--google photos, Fitbit, and Klipsch headphones features working is mindboggling. Apple watches also straight up wouldn't work without another apple devices to phone home to last I checked. That's the anticompetitive lawsuit
"We need you to stop making a good product forcing your customers to only use your version so your customers can finally move away from it."
Fixed it. Non-apple watches, for instance, can't use GPS from an iPhone or cause it to emit sound to local lost phones, despite being previously able to, demonstrating no technical limitations just a walled-garden limitation
@niucllos
@lemm.ee