Idk about door dash, but my son was delivering through Uber and he got all the tips for his deliveries.
Idk about door dash, but my son was delivering through Uber and he got all the tips for his deliveries.
They do get the tips.
Oh, that’s a good way to get them to ring the bell. I tried making them ring the bell other ways, but they never do. Uber Eats has a feature where they need to get a code from you to prove they handed you the food. I had several drivers leave the food at the door and then text me, asking me for the code. Fuck off
I guess it depends on where the beach house is located. I stayed at a beach house in San Diego for a week once in my 20’s, and it was fucking amazing! That was one of the most fun weeks of my entire life. The short 2’ wall in-between the beach and the house kept all of the sand out, and there weren’t any seagulls. We sat on the porch drinking beer, BBQing, and inviting people who walked past to join us. It was paradise.
That’s too bad. Apparently their holo lens was really good. But pricing it at $4000 meant most people weren’t interested.
I have an LG OLED too. There’s a setting for recommended content, or something like that. I turned anything off that looked like it meant ads or tracking.
So they recognize that the owner of the product is trying to prevent them from collecting data, and actively try to circumvent the owner’s security measures? This shit should be illegal, and carry a huge fine. You paid for the device, and it’s connected to your network, which you control. I’m sick and tired of corporations thinking it’s totally okay to be straight-up spyware and adware. Some supposedly legitimate companies these days make old-school computer viruses look down right respectful.
My TV is connected to the Internet and doesn’t do this. There’s a setting to turn it off.
“Ad enabled”
If you’re a senior engineer, then you should have a team of juniors doing most of the coding. Your job is to architect, peer review, meet with stakeholders, etc… At least that has been my experience. Unless you are on one of those small teams with all senior engineers and then you have to do all of the above, and the coding too. I’ve had that experience as well.
Chevy is still all about knobs, which is the proper way to create car controls. Ford is pretty heavy into a full touch screen control center, which is really annoying as a driver.
You know what’s unsafe? Putting a long-ass disclosure about keeping your eyes on the road that you have to close before you can use your infotainment center. We know how to drive, dude. Adding a distraction doesn’t improve safety, it makes it worse.
Yup. That plus steal all your contacts and anything else they can get direct or indirect permissions for.
Definitely! I work at a computer 8-10 hours per day, 5 days a week. The last thing I want to do when I’m done working is sit at computer some more. I do almost all of my browsing on my phone. Firefox Mobile Nightly, plus NextDNS, plus Nord VPN, plus uBlock origin, plus a fake user agent string. I’m pretty secure on my phone.
“Here’s a website that you needed to install on your phone to see!”
I’m out of the loop. What happened? Did someone decompile their code and find definitive proof of a throttle for Firefox?
Also pushing pop-ups everywhere, except this time they’re part of the site and we can’t easily block them.
That seems about right for Meta. They probably broke it on purpose to see how many times you’ll try to log back in before giving up. They do these types of tests to determine how much of a hold they have on their userbase.
It’s about as dangerous as using IE in the old days, or Edge in administrator mode.