...roughly four months ahead of schedule.
One of the new memory fabs under construction.
...roughly four months ahead of schedule.
One of the new memory fabs under construction.
One of the shops that has been closed is next to the constituency office of the local Conservative MP for South Leicestershire, Alberto Costa.
"Let's be clear this man should not be in Blaby, should not be in this country," said Costa. The fact Jamal had been running a business next door to a member of parliament's constituency office "speaks volumes about the character of this individual".
Indeed. Most unsavory.
https://pcpartpicker.com/trends/price/memory/
This has new 2x8GB 3200 DDR4 DIMMs being a bit over $200 at the moment.
A year back, it was $50, but not now.
Recent leaks suggest that Sony will either have to sell its upcoming PlayStation 6 console at a minimum of $960 or push the launch date back into 2028 or even beyond that.
I seriously think that they should push it back to 2028.
I think that Valve's making a mistake by not pushing back the Steam Machine to 2028 too, though at least for Valve, a hardware platform flopping isn't a big deal, since they don't rely on it alone to make sales.
Or maybe I'll be wrong, and gamers will be significantly less price sensitive than they have been in the past. But my guess is that they aren't gonna be jumping on consoles with a pricetag that's that high. As I said before, the only console to be successful in the past that cost nearly that much in inflation-adjusted terms was the Atari 2600.
I just recently sold one of my houses for 900k. Which I bought for 300k 25yrs ago. And it even was due for major renovations. Well, could have. Actually sold to them for 500. Didn’t wanna be an idiot but also didn’t want to rip them off. I did nothing of value to justify that gain. And they were very happy. Still unfair…
300,000 euros in 2001 is, inflation-adjusted, 512,000 euros in 2026. If you sold at 500k euros, you sold for slightly less than you bought it for in real terms.
How big a house an average person can afford doesn't necessarily precisely track how big a house the average person actually purchases, mind.
I mean, they're all WireGuard. ProtonVPN is WireGuard. Mulvad VPN -- what I assume you're referencing
is WireGuard.
If you don't like a given WireGuard VPN provider, then just switch to some other VPN provider that supports WireGuard and use that service instead.
United24 coverage, with more details:
Ukraine Sets One of Russia’s Largest Baltic Oil Terminals Ablaze in St. Petersburg
View of Russian fuel queue from space
https://newsukraine.rbc.ua/news/satellite-images-reveal-kilometer-long-fuel-1783111202.html
We still don't have a Threadiverse equivalent of Reddit's /r/totallynotrobots, if someone wants to start that, speaking of new communities.