to answer your edit, yes all creatures started out as single celled-organisms many billions of years ago and gradually evolved. this process is still happening today but takes millions of years, not something you would observe in a human lifetime
crystenn
wow how could this have appen-ed
(i just really wanted to make the pun)
shut the fuck up LMFAO
indeed. completely forgot to mention him but I did a thing is also a very fun watch
stuff made here for some crazy projects and impressive engineering/software writing
j kenji lopez alt for very informative cooking videos
michael reeves for a crack cocaine version of stuff made here
I believe this is a thing already, albeit not solar powered by a company called 8sleep. I've never personally tried them but heard of them from some sponsor spots on youtube
fair enough. allow me to rephrase, whatever reason we're on the fediverse, it should be held to the same standard. for context, the initial commenter said something along the lines of "you don't have to be here"
if it was any other social media like reddit doing this, everyone would be up in arms about it. no one is forced to be on reddit either. we're on lemmy bc we value our privacy (no ads, tracking, etc.) so it should be held to the same standard too and not given a free pass.
reading the article, it doesn't even seem like a dynamic island problem. the author is complaining that they are unable to quickly glance and what notifications they have without pulling the notification shade down, which would have happened whether the island is there or not. iOs has never done that, even when displays were squared off with no cutout. article feels clickbaity and complaining about nothing
totally agree, peer reviewing is the bare minimum, but it IS a step above any old article published on a random website. also would like to acknowledge the limitations of this particular study. fair criticism and is something the authors brought up in their paper too.
my reply was in response to the original commenter mentioning that there was no link to the study at all.
At the bottom of the article, the paper has been published in a peer reviewed journal.
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/2812964
you're talking about a bandwidth cap, not a data cap. data caps are when you get throttled after downloading a certain amount of data or get charged extra. think phone data plans where you have 10 or 20gb or whatever per month