lmao i added to the word of mouth here, that was the point.
ofcourse HP sells more. they’re a market monopoly that polemically and aggressively remove common knowledge of competitors when able to.
lmao i added to the word of mouth here, that was the point.
ofcourse HP sells more. they’re a market monopoly that polemically and aggressively remove common knowledge of competitors when able to.
this reminds me of many instances of undesireable policymaking where algorithms just connected state personell with agendas of politicians through the black box of social media… like a judge who got the thoughts of a politician on certain rulings which is illegal in nordic countries. like the message of “hey what if climate activists are obstructing capital ventures in law? can a judge try that?” is illegal for a politician to ask of a judge here, yet through social media it happened. she didn’t see that politician’s exact words but was bombarded by posts and probably ads that shaped the way she thought about her job as a juridical arbiter of lives. left uncorrelated in mainstream
like modos, the open source e-ink kit with as fast refresh rates as LCD screens? on crowdsource right now
and as “open printer”? open source printer with refillable ink cartridges, no tracking shenanigans, a repairable design and possibility to just put a roll of paper (at most A3 in width) then letting it print bannerolls… crowdsource too iirc
so osmosis? kinda like the consensus people form from being on the internetverse - not knowing just where they picked a fact or perspective up from, but touting it as an obvious fact or perspective that everyone has
so just like crypto & AI: a ponzo scheme
watching parent play videogames, touching screen to make effects, being asked to play using one part of the controls (like “you control movement, i look around. now lets switch”) asking how they’d make all caps letters after showing them how the shift key works