They exempted iMessage because it’s not big in Europe. If it were as big as in the US it would’ve fallen under the DMA.
They exempted iMessage because it’s not big in Europe. If it were as big as in the US it would’ve fallen under the DMA.
What’s the difference between this and CBOR?
Yes I meant article 5 but did not remember the number 🙈🙈. Thanks!
Shame on Austria
Wouldn’t this invoke NATO against the UK and demand a lot of reparations?
The Danish and the Swedes putting aside their hate means that you messed up really big
I thought that it was the carriers the ones hosting the RCS server. Is this not true?
Anyone good at insulting and ranting can make the cut. It should not be hard to train an AI on it.
Spanish (aka Castilian) has one for every country.
Instead of trying to tackle the real issue: “why people park their bikes where they shouldn’t?”. They decide to tackle the symptom… That’s your average politician.
Well, what they use a lot in the Netherlands is a two floor bike rack. Something like this: https://images.app.goo.gl/7JBUFp6PnARhSKkX6
Indeed. Even though there’s a lot of bike racks. I feel that we need at least three times more. Also, many people have 2 or 3 bikes parked in different stations and other bikes get abandoned in the parking place. I think they should start checking that bikes are not parked in a spot more than 30 days.
Quite an interesting read. When explained it seems obvious but this whole “weirdness” is introduced because there are two types of “noexcept”. The exception specifier and the exception checker. All because the committee doesn’t want to introduce new keywords (which I respect).
Spain has the lowest cost per kilometer in the world when it comes to building High Speed train (14.5 million €/km) and they care for the environment and don’t have slave labour. Rather, they have very strong unions.
Duo (videocalling app)
Well, I rarely fail because I look inside the connector and see where the plastic is and then plug it properly. I tend to fail when I cannot see inside the connector because it’s in a weird spot.
I guess the redditor was either bragging about always looking inside or was a kid
In Spain, union staff is company staff. They get paid by the company. There are some rules about how much staff time a union gets depending on company size. If I remember properly it was about 1 full time employee per every 80 workers.
For striking, in Spain people just take the cut of that day or, depending on the sector, there are arrangements where workers strike and company still pays the same. Usually transport workers.
Wait wait, you PAY your unions in the US??? I thought I already heard all
I’m from Spain and I don’t get how it’s that high. For my industry it is possibly true but lower paying jobs (which Spain has a lot) are very bad. People working 9 to 20 with a long lunch break is very common and it’s quite a horrible schedule…
I was still waiting for them to enable it by default…