I had the same issue, decided to remove Roku instead…
I used to have a Roku TV, plus a a few of the standalone Roku Ultras for my other (non-Roku) TVs. I got a full page advert when I started up the TV one day and started the process of replacing them all (I think it is when Roku were experimenting with that).
Over about a year I replaced them with Apple TVs* and the user experience is far better, plus the amount of tracking domains reported by Pi-hole dropped precipitously! The TVs don't have internet access at all, they are just driven via the HDMI port now.
* I replaced the Ultras first, and when the Roku TV eventually started acting laggy on the apps I replaced the Roku TV as well.
There are also distributed databases that use RAFT but can still scale while delivering distributed consensus don’t is not a challenge that can’t be solved. For example, TiDB handles millions of QPS while delivering ACID transactions, e.g. https://vivekbansal.substack.com/p/system-design-study-how-f...
When I used to work in credit control and accounts receivable, the use of D-U-N-S numbers was how we tied a lot of this information together. It is similar to how SSN are used by credit rating agencies but for businesses and global (unlike the EIN).
I am not sure what is going on with that screen, but the whole page seems to be "vibrating" in a very distracting way, never encountered that on another site before!
It appears to be related to my display settings on Mac OS. When the text size for the display is set to the "Larger text" it shows this vibrating. When the text size is set to one of the smaller sizes the shaking/vibrating does not appear.
The context in the related AP article shows that they were CEO of Cadence during the time when that company violated export control rules by selling certain technology to Chinese organizations linked to the Chinese military.
> According to the U.S. Department of Justice, Cadence, in July, agreed to plead guilty to resolve charges that it violated export controls rules to sell hardware and software to China’s National University of Defense Technology, which is linked to the Chinese military. Tan was the CEO of Cadence when the company violated the rules between 2015 and 2021.
> It's also a hoot to just see LDS missionaries waiving their iPhones around with the Genesis Apple clearly visible.
To be fair, the LDS doctrine around the fruit from the Garden of Eden and the fall is quite different from the Catholic understanding, it’s seen as a necessary, even a good thing, in the overall plan.
To be honest, I would say that these signs placed by Apple Computer were done not out of malice, but by way of warning. To say, "Here Be Dragons!" To counsel those who may be ignorant, there are pitfalls ahead, and be careful, because you could lose your soul to these things, even though they are designed as morally neutral.
Computers are a tool, after all. The fruit depicted could just as easily be from the Tree of Life. It's all about how we use those tools.
Could also just be to show up first in the yellow pages
Also tools are not neutral, they carry the intent of their designer and make whatever they are designed to do easier than it used to be; if you want to be convinced please read Douglas Rushkoff's Program or Be Programmed: Ten Commands for a Digital Age
I would argue that it’s likely there was no Biblical reference intended, but that even if it was, it’s then more likely the apple is a reference to “knowledge” (as in, the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil) than a vague warning about using their products.
Well, Wisconsin is #1 in cheese production and was #1 in milk production until the 1990s, still #2. If you take milk and cheese together, I think the historical nickname "America's Dairyland" continues to be applicable, especially considering the importance of dairy to Wisconsin's economy compared to California.
OT for this interesting discussion about Epic but one of the reasons that Wisconsin slipped to #2 in milk production back in the 90's was that northern tier milk producing states instituted stronger environmental protections back in the 1980's forcing changes in how animal waste in huge dairy operations had to be managed. At the time there was a lot of pollution due to runoff of waste into creeks and rivers causing a cascade of problems with water quality downstream of these huge dairy operations.
A large number of these operations, instead of complying with the new environmental rules that would force better waste containment simply looked around the country for areas that had less strict requirements, lower enforcement, and an established dairy industry. Many of them ended up moving to counties in north central Texas and buying up large tracts of cheap land. They shipped their herds south and went on about their business down here just as they had up there. Erath County became one of the state's largest milk producing counties as a result of this migration.
Texas has been a cattle state for generations but most of the larger operations were traditional ranches of 10's of thousands of acres with lots of open land where cattle herds were measured based on # acres/cow metrics. Feedlots where cattle were fattened just before slaughter were the only places where you had large herds crammed into a small area. The dairy industry bought much smaller properties, up to several thousands of acres, and their dairy herds were crammed into these smaller spaces with the wastes being largely allowed to run off into creeks and rivers. It took years before Texas stepped in to try to get a handle on the agri-waste runoff pollution of their rivers and many large rivers in the state still have contamination issues.
Not coincidentally, this same issue affected swine operations in the US causing concentration of pig farms in North Carolina due to lax regulations.
I do want to clarify a few points, on the project page it does provide the following information:
> Distributed Transactions: TiDB uses a two-phase commit protocol to ensure ACID compliance, providing strong consistency. Transactions span multiple nodes, and TiDB's distributed nature ensures data correctness even in the presence of network partitions or node failures.
> High Availability: Built-in Raft consensus protocol ensures reliability and automated failover. Data is stored in multiple replicas, and transactions are committed only after writing to the majority of replicas, guaranteeing strong consistency and availability, even if some replicas fail. Geographic placement of replicas can be configured for different disaster tolerance levels.
There are quite a few. Pinterest, LinkedIn, Plaid, Mercari, and Rakuten shared their experiences with TiDB at PingCAP's annual event last year (2024) - https://www.pingcap.com/htap-summit/.
In the previous event (2023) there were speakers from Airbnb, Databricks, Flipkart, PayPay, and others sharing their experiences as well - https://www.pingcap.com/htap-summit/sept-2023/
Disclosure: Employee of PingCAP the company behind TiDB
I used to have a Roku TV, plus a a few of the standalone Roku Ultras for my other (non-Roku) TVs. I got a full page advert when I started up the TV one day and started the process of replacing them all (I think it is when Roku were experimenting with that).
Over about a year I replaced them with Apple TVs* and the user experience is far better, plus the amount of tracking domains reported by Pi-hole dropped precipitously! The TVs don't have internet access at all, they are just driven via the HDMI port now.
* I replaced the Ultras first, and when the Roku TV eventually started acting laggy on the apps I replaced the Roku TV as well.