Miscellaneous Tech News
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Private repos is my only reason for using Gitlab.
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@black3dynamite said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Private repos is my only reason for using Gitlab.
Same, otherwise I'd be on GitHub more.
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@Obsolesce said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@black3dynamite said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Private repos is my only reason for using Gitlab.
Same, otherwise I'd be on GitHub more.
Why? What are you getting more from GitHub?
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@Obsolesce said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@black3dynamite said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Private repos is my only reason for using Gitlab.
Same, otherwise I'd be on GitHub more.
I'm not really sure why you'd want to be on GitHub?
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Lenovo’s Legion laptops are gaming machines you won’t be embarrassed to use
Turn off the RGB lighting and they won't look out of place at work
A common theme of gamer-oriented hardware is that it is ostentatious and often ugly, with bright lights and logos and LEDs making it all feel rather distasteful. Lenovo's Legion gaming hardware consciously bucks that trend by producing machines that offer gaming specs (and all the colorful lighting that for some reason goes with those specs) while still looking respectable and grown-up once you turn all the colored lights off.
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Amazon attempts less creepy delivery by placing packages in your garage
Amazon's still trying to get customers to open up part of their homes for deliveries.
Amazon isn't giving up on its Key home delivery service. Rather than letting couriers in through your front door, Amazon wants you to open up your garage. The company announced its new Key for Garage expansion at CES, a new variation on its home delivery service that allows couriers to securely deliver packages where you park your cars or keep all your junk.
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Razer announces a gaming monitor, haptic feedback PC gaming peripherals
And did we mention RGB? So, so much RGB.
At this year's CES, it sometimes seems like consumer electronics announcements are dominated by two trends: gaming gear and digital voice assistants. Gaming brand Razer made announcements related to both this week.
Arguably the most notable are HyperSense—a haptic feedback platform that makes PC peripherals like headphones, gaming chairs, and mice provide gaming controller-like feedback along with the audio in games—and the Raptor, Razer's first gaming monitor designed in-house.
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@mlnews said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Amazon attempts less creepy delivery by placing packages in your garage
Amazon's still trying to get customers to open up part of their homes for deliveries.
Amazon isn't giving up on its Key home delivery service. Rather than letting couriers in through your front door, Amazon wants you to open up your garage. The company announced its new Key for Garage expansion at CES, a new variation on its home delivery service that allows couriers to securely deliver packages where you park your cars or keep all your junk.
Sigh... Why aren't they just going with a lockbox on the porch? be done with it already.
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Sigh... Why aren't they just going with a lockbox on the porch? be done with it already.
According to Forbes, more than half of Americans have Amazon delivery. Figure in bulk, you can put a secure lock box on someone's porch (and what about apartments) for less than $50, which I doubt... with 126 million households in the US, that would be north of a $3 billion investment. Until they lose more than that in 2 years there is no way they'll do it.
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@pchiodo said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Sigh... Why aren't they just going with a lockbox on the porch? be done with it already.
According to Forbes, more than half of Americans have Amazon delivery. Figure in bulk, you can put a secure lock box on someone's porch (and what about apartments) for less than $50, which I doubt... with 126 million households in the US, that would be north of a $3 billion investment. Until they lose more than that in 2 years there is no way they'll do it.
Keep your fancy real math out of this!
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I suppose they could come up with something like "Amazon Secure" which is a premium over Prime that includes the lock box. But would people pay for it??
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@pchiodo said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
I suppose they could come up with something like "Amazon Secure" which is a premium over Prime that includes the lock box. But would people pay for it??
I wouldn't, but yes, some would.
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@pchiodo said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
I suppose they could come up with something like "Amazon Secure" which is a premium over Prime that includes the lock box. But would people pay for it??
How would you secure the lockbox from being carried off?
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@JaredBusch said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@pchiodo said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
I suppose they could come up with something like "Amazon Secure" which is a premium over Prime that includes the lock box. But would people pay for it??
How would you secure the lockbox from being carried off?
Lag bolts.
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@RojoLoco said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@JaredBusch said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@pchiodo said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
I suppose they could come up with something like "Amazon Secure" which is a premium over Prime that includes the lock box. But would people pay for it??
How would you secure the lockbox from being carried off?
Lag bolts.
Into concrete maybe. But if it is attached to a normal house, they'll just cut off whatever it is attached to.
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@RojoLoco said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@JaredBusch said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@pchiodo said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
I suppose they could come up with something like "Amazon Secure" which is a premium over Prime that includes the lock box. But would people pay for it??
How would you secure the lockbox from being carried off?
Lag bolts.
30,000 volts only disabled with the right code.
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@JaredBusch said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@pchiodo said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
I suppose they could come up with something like "Amazon Secure" which is a premium over Prime that includes the lock box. But would people pay for it??
How would you secure the lockbox from being carried off?
We're forgetting about Amazon Lockers. The giant kiosks that are located at gas stations and such. People go to a locker, scan their phone or receipt, and a door automatically opens. The customer tells Amazon which locker they want to go to based on an arbitrary name that Amazon has setup. Once the item is delivered to the locker, the customer gets a notification to pick it up.
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@scottalanmiller said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@RojoLoco said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@JaredBusch said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@pchiodo said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
I suppose they could come up with something like "Amazon Secure" which is a premium over Prime that includes the lock box. But would people pay for it??
How would you secure the lockbox from being carried off?
Lag bolts.
Into concrete maybe. But if it is attached to a normal house, they'll just cut off whatever it is attached to.
Most package theft is opportunity based though. That's premeditation and a lot of time to cut wood or lag bolts....
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what happens when the package is too large for said lockbox, or there is too many items? I purchase a lot of stuff all at once from amazon and it's not uncommon for me to get a small pallet worth of boxes.