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nadim.computer
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| | | | | I've been loving computers and computing since I was five years old, and in the intervening 25 years, I've never been more excited about anything in computing as much as I was about the Apple Silicon M1 chip when it was announced on November 10th. The M1 promised to bring huge leaps in performance, battery life and hardware longevity at a $999 price point and in a fanless chassis. It felt genuinely exciting to see such a significant leap in computing technology all at once. | |
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initialcharge.net
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| | | | | Despite my lack of enthusiasm for present-day Apple, there's still a lot to be excited about in the world of technology. The following is an unordered list of things that I've been excited about recently. If you have any thoughts about the following items or have some tech that you've been excited about, I'd love [...] | |
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www.dannyguo.com
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melkat.blog
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| | | Apple has made a lot of partnerships with big companies like Quantum Computer Services (AOL), Microsoft, HP, Intel, Cingular (AT&T), Epic Games, Valve, Capcom, and Ubisoft. They are all pretty one-sided in terms of who benefits. Focusing on these partnerships distracts from what has made Apple's platforms successful: the community of dedicated indie developers. But like their corporate partnerships, this relationship is not a healthy one. | ||