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[-] fpslem@lemmy.world 1 points 2 days ago

I think anyone who thinks otherwise either curated it to be awful or didn’t really use it at all.

. . . or was targeted by harassment campaigns that the company did a poor job of protecting against. Plenty of celebrities and political actors realized they could weaponize their fanbases to go after critics, and Twitter never did much to stop it. For public officials or organizations, twitter too often was a cesspool of abuse that they couldn't afford to leave, and that was messed up. (I think the balance has shifted now, that they can afford to leave and have a moral obligation to do so, but many haven't.)

I always enjoyed my twitter experiences, because like you, I curated a nice feed to follow (and used a browser to keep on chronological timeline). But I was just a follower, mostly, and was never targeted by the really nasty stuff. But I'm not so myopic as to declare that what worked for me wasn't awful for many other folks.

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submitted 2 days ago by fpslem@lemmy.world to c/evs@lemmy.world

Volkswagen has ended talks with Renault to launch an affordable EV, according to sources. However, a low-cost Volkswagen electric car is still in the plans.

A report from Germany’s Handelsblatt last December hinted at a partnership between Volkswagen and Renault to build an EV under 20,000 euros ($21,500).

The report noted that talks were still in a “very early stage,” but a Renault spokesperson explained that partnering would be necessary to stay competitive. “We are in different discussions, but nothing has been finalized,” the source said.

Renault announced plans to launch the Twingo e-Tech successor, the Legend, last November. The entry-level EV is expected to start at around 20,000 euros ($21,500).

Despite Renault confirming it was in “good discussions” with Volkswagen to build an affordable EV in February, it looks like the automakers may go their separate ways.

According to sources familiar with the matter, VW is walking away from the partnership. A new Reuters report claims Volkswagen has ended talks with Renault to build a low-cost electric version of its Twingo.

[-] fpslem@lemmy.world 29 points 2 days ago

Another truck with a flat hood that hides anyone shorter than 5 feet tall? Thanks, I hate it. No wonder we have so many road deaths in America when manufactures are allowed to make vehicles with such poor visibility.

[-] fpslem@lemmy.world 12 points 2 days ago

Yep. sigh I guess I'll go replay Portal 2 again. It really is fantastic, I should be happy that we got it when we did.

[-] fpslem@lemmy.world 35 points 4 days ago

Well done, OP, for realizing it in the moment!

[-] fpslem@lemmy.world 3 points 5 days ago

Those are some tough and somewhat disparate goals for a single bike. Small/foldable is doable. Trails and sand are doable. Something that does both well enough to be worthwhile is a tall order. Maybe something like the Lectric XP 3.0 could manage it, but I don't know.

5

There’s a wonderful history of GC riders doing things GC riders shouldn’t do. Go back to the 2016 Tour de France, for example, where the tail end of an otherwise processional stage from Carcassonne to Montpelier saw the wind kick up. Echelons formed, collapsed, and formed again, and when things finally shook out it wasn’t a quartet of Classics bruisers off the front. It was Chris Froome in the yellow jersey, his elbows flapping in the breeze like any good adherent to the Jonathan Milan School of Aerodynamics. With him: a peak Peter Sagan, looking like it wasn’t even that hard, Sagan’s teammate Maciej Bodnar, who I think should have been gifted the victory (Froome prevented this), and Geraint Thomas, again wondering how on earth he got here.

[-] fpslem@lemmy.world 2 points 5 days ago

Yeah, I can't even begrudge Pogi for his dominance, he's out there gleefully riding his bike and mixing it up.

Quintana does not look good. Unless he's got some unannounced illness or will settle in, I don't have a lot of hope for his stage-hunting prospects. Plenty of competition there, I'd probably bet on one of the young guns over him at this point.

[-] fpslem@lemmy.world 3 points 6 days ago

Finally got around to Talos Principle (the first one) and it's as good as people said.

I also started playing some space battles in Empire at War on "Star Wars Day" (May the Fourth) and find that level of not-very-challenging RTS kind of soothing, so I'm back to playing that for a bit.

[-] fpslem@lemmy.world 4 points 6 days ago

UK hosted Eurovision in 2023, it would be very hard to top those numbers this year.

[-] fpslem@lemmy.world 3 points 6 days ago

Visma's injury luck is pretty lousy this year, with WVA out on injury prior to the Giro, and now his replacement, Christophe Laporte, withdrawing after that bad crash on Stage 5. I know it's weird to think of Visma as an underdog in anything, but I was glad for Olav Kooij yesterday, good for him and it's nice to see the young talent stepping up. Also, Cian Uijtdebroeks in the white jersey and sitting in 5th is pretty solid. I hope he can prove himself as they get deeper into the mountains.

8

First rest day of the Giro d'Italia, what's on your mind and what have you been watching? It doesn't have to be Giro-related, Itzulia Women and Tour de Hongrie just wrapped up too. Heck, if you want to talk gravel or MTB, that's cool, I hear Lucinda Brand is tearing it up on gravel, and the MTB World Cup is still going on in Brazil.

935

Description: Panel 1: A man sits inside a house at a table or desk, looking at his laptop screen while participating in a video conference call with 9 or more participants. There is a window in the background with the sun in the sky. The man holds up his hand and tells the other participants on the call, "Excuse me everyone, sorry to interrupt . . ." Panel 2: The man looks away from the laptop screen towards the open window and the sky outside. He tells the video conference participants "I have the sunshine on the other line." Panel 3: The man leaves his seat, apparently abruptly, as the chair is knocked over, while the screen is still on and shows the video call participants. The man walks towards an open door, where a backpack sits at the doorway. He looks outside as he says over his shoulder "I have to take this call." Panel 4: The man is wordlessly walking over a hill, with grasses and bushes in the foreground and trees in the background, wearing the backpack, following the sun and not looking back.

Comic by Jeremyville.

[-] fpslem@lemmy.world 4 points 1 week ago

The comment on that website is chef's kiss:

"Instead of a Dark Lord you shall have a Queen!"

[-] fpslem@lemmy.world 49 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

Amazon Music

I invested heavily in the Amazon Music ecosystem, I bought hundreds of albums on there, and the platform is now very nearly unusuable. I cannot even listen to the songs that I paid for without also having to listen to ads. And the Android app now hides the downloads in some hidden folder so I can't even download them and listen to them on another player. It makes me furious.

I've actually gone back to CDs, if you can believe it. It's kind of nice sometimes, especially for full album plays, but I do miss a nice big playlist of my favorite songs from all artists.

1470

When Bloomberg reported that Spotify would be upping the cost of its premium subscription from $9.99 to $10.99, and including 15 hours of audiobooks per month in the U.S., the change sounded like a win for songwriters and publishers. Higher subscription prices typically equate to a bump in U.S. mechanical royalties — but not this time.

By adding audiobooks into Spotify’s premium tier, the streaming service now claims it qualifies to pay a discounted “bundle” rate to songwriters for premium streams, given Spotify now has to pay licensing for both books and music from the same price tag — which will only be a dollar higher than when music was the only premium offering. Additionally, Spotify will reclassify its duo and family subscription plans as bundles as well.

7

It was somewhere in the roundabouts on the outskirts of Lucca that despair began to take hold.

As the Giro d’Italia headed into the birthplace of Mario Cipollini, the race’s all-time leader in stage wins, a four-rider breakaway was up the road, and the sprinters’ teams had marshalled behind for the chase. But something was wrong. A manageable gap, some 45 seconds at the 10 km-to-go mark, wasn’t dropping.

Lidl-Trek threw its full might into the chase for stage 4 winner Jonathan Milan, driving a classic HTC-High Road style train, but as the kilometers ticked by, the gap stayed stubbornly in place. GPS-based time gaps can be of questionable accuracy, but whatever the actual number, the main problem for the chase was that number wasn’t changing.

Depleted or just discouraged, Milan’s teammates disappeared from the front, the Maglia Ciclamino swarmed by a hodgepodge of riders from Soudal-Quick Step, Visma-Lease a Bike, and other sprint hopefuls. No matter, the gap still didn’t budge much, and in the end the break held off the pack by a comfortable 11 seconds, denying the sprinters a crucial chance at a stage win.

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submitted 1 week ago by fpslem@lemmy.world to c/privacy@lemmy.world

There are lots of reasons to want to shut off your car’s data collection. The Mozilla Foundation has called modern cars “surveillance machines on wheels” and ranked them worse than any other product category last year, with all 25 car brands they reviewed failing to offer adequate privacy protections.

With sensors, microphones, and cameras, cars collect way more data than needed to operate the vehicle. They also share and sell that information to third parties, something many Americans don’t realize they’re opting into when they buy these cars. Companies are quick to flaunt their privacy policies, but those amount to pages upon pages of legalese that leave even professionals stumped about what exactly car companies collect and where that information might go.

So what can they collect?

“Pretty much everything,” said Misha Rykov, a research associate at the Mozilla Foundation, who worked on the car-privacy report. “Sex-life data, biometric data, demographic, race, sexual orientation, gender — everything.” . . .

5
3
submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by fpslem@lemmy.world to c/procycling@lemmy.world

spoilerGCN: Giro d'Italia stage 4: Jonathan Milan takes memorable sprint win

Jonathan Milan (Lidl-Trek) sprinted to victory on stage 4 of the Giro d’Italia, opening up early on the fast finish into Andora and putting down the power to hold off his competitors all the way to the line.

Kaden Groves (Alpecin-Deceuninck) took second just behind the Italian, whilst Phil Bauhaus (Bahrain Victorious) took third in the high-speed bunch kick.

With the Capo Mele climb punctuating the finale of the Milan-San Remo-style stage, Filippo Ganna (Ineos Grenadiers) tried a late attack, launching with 4km to go on the climb, and looked to be away at one point, but was brought back with 600m to go as Lidl-Trek opened up the lead-out.

Simone Consonni dropped Milan off with around 300m to go, leaving the Italian on the front for a long time, but his strength proved enough with none of Groves, Bauhaus or stage 3 winner Tim Merlier (Soudal Quick-Step) able to come round him at all. Winner of the sprints jersey in 2023, this is Milan’s second Giro d’Italia stage win, and his first of this year’s race after taking second on Monday.

"So many emotions now. I said from the beginning we came here with one goal for everyone," Milan said at the finish.

"Today the guys did an amazing job, it’s such an amazing sensation to win again here in the Giro d’Italia. I really have to say thanks always to my teammates, they believe in this day, and also it’s pretty special because my parents are here, so I’m really happy.

"I want to say thanks also to the people who are watching me from home, who were really close to me in this period before and in these moments, so thanks to everyone. We saw Ganna going really full gas in the last climb. We caught him with 900m to go – he also helped us in a way, let’s say. Then Simo did a fantastic lead-out and I just had to play my cards then."

Video of finish: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RF1X7wH4WdQ

14

Demi Vollering (SD Worx-Protime) sealed a dominant overall win at the Vuelta Femenina with a comprehensive victory on the final mountain stage to the summit of the Valdesquí ski resort.

The race leader attacked with 6.5km to go and immediately put all of her rivals in difficulty before soloing clear to take her second stage win of the race, with both coming at summit finishes.

The Dutch rider held her lead all the way to the finish to win alone and seal the first Grand Tour of the 2024 season.

Évita Muzic (FDJ-SUEZ) finished second on the stage, 29 seconds down, with Riejanne Markus (Team Visma-Lease a Bike) crossing the line four seconds later.

Elisa Longo Borghini (Lidl-Trek) came into the stage sitting second overall but was dropped as soon as Vollering put the hammer down. The Italian was put into the red and despite battling back through the final stages of the race she was unable to hang onto second overall, slipping to third at two minutes back, with Markus' consistency rewarded with second overall at 1:49.

The final climb to the ski resort was an epic battle between the best GC riders in the world with FDJ-SUEZ gunning for another stage win in the race and a possible podium spot for Muzic. Grace Brown was pivotal in the French squad's tactics as she set a furious pace on both of the day's climbs and she whittled down the front group to just a dozen or so riders.

However when Vollering accelerated Muzic and Markus were the only riders able to truly follow and they too were distanced due to the relentless pace of the SD Worx-Protime rider.

“It’s really nice, the team did a really good job the whole day. I was a bit nervous, because this last climb, I thought it wasn’t so super hard. It’s difficult because of the headwind and it’s not super steep," Vollering said at the finish.

"There was one part where we turned a bit and went in the back so there I thought I need to attack, and I need to make sure I have a gap so the rest will have a headwind to chase me back. I could extend my gap and stay out so I’m really happy to win this stage. It’s really nice to finish it off like this. We did a really good tour here, some podiums and two stage wins, so I think we can be very proud of ourselves."

6

Each moment the team has left Vollering to fend for herself could be written off in isolation, but as they continue to mount up, scrutiny of the team’s treatment towards the Tour winner will only get louder, and each moment will be picked apart.

Perhaps everything will become clear soon, and the situation during stage six was just miscommunication, but if it smells like a duck and walks like a duck … All we can hope is that Vollering’s contract negotiations are sorted soon and the Dutch national champion can focus on her job, but by golly, the SD Worx-Protime team bus can’t be a fun place to hang out at the moment.

6

Demi Vollering set a blistering pace up the only categorized climb of the day during Stage 6 of La Vuelta España Femenina, but it wasn’t enough to shake FDJ-Suez’s Évita Muzic who came around the SD Worx-Protime rider to win the stage. Yara Kasteijn (Fenix-Deceuninck) finished third 15 seconds behind.

Vollering extended her lead on Lidl-Trek’s Elisa Longo Borghini in the overall classification to 56 seconds, and Riejanne Markus (Visma-Lease a Bike) was able to gain a few seconds on Longo Borghini and hold third overall, 1:14 behind Vollering.

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fpslem

joined 5 months ago