Yeah, that’s the name of the character, but not the comic strip.
Yeah, that’s the name of the character, but not the comic strip.
I’m gonna watch the thread but then I realized I don’t think there’s a way to do that on here
There is an issue for this on the Lemmy GitHub, but it is not actively being worked on. I hope the Lemmy devs implement it soon.
Where is paid_not_payed bot when we need them?
What does it do?
If it’s created by the Lemmy devs, capital letters might not be included. Might have only communist and socialist letters :P
I tried some of the popular jailbreaks for ChatGPT, and they just made it hallucinate more.
Following what? And how?
Thanks; fixed!
For those who are curious, the word was “link”.
Hello! It looks like you didn’t link to a sublemmy correctly. Try this one instead: [email protected]
I am not a bot, and this action was performed manually.
Holy crap what is that website. Cant read shit.
Here you go:
Insulated blue light-emitting diodes could banish OLED burn-in for good
News
By Aaron Klotz
published 22 hours agoThis new design change could kill off burn-in, reduce manufacturing complexity, and reduce power consumption in future OLED TVs and monitors.
OLED technology is quickly gaining traction in the PC market and powers some of the best gaming monitors. However, the Achilles heel of OLEDs has always been its burn-in, which inevitably reduces the lifespan of OLED monitors and TVs. No one has been able to fully rectify this issue. However, a new OLED design philosophy created by researchers at the University of Cambridge and reported by Nature has the potential to kill off burn-in for good.
To address this, the University of Cambridge has developed a new OLED design that better controls the light from a blue-light-emitting diode and reduces its power consumption. The blue light-emitting diodes are covalently encapsulated by insulating alkylene straps.
OLED burn-in is generated by the emission of unstable and inefficient light from the blue-light-emitting diode in an OLED display. As a result, putting an insulating material over the blue light diode specifically helps reduce the instability of the blue light protecting the display from potential burn-in issues that could occur.
“Here we introduce a molecular design where ultranarrowband blue emitters are covalently encapsulated by insulating alkylene straps,” reads the Cambridge research paper. “Organic light-emitting diodes with simple emissive layers consisting of pristine thermally activated delayed fluorescence hosts doped with encapsulated terminal emitters exhibit negligible external quantum efficiency drops compared with non-doped devices, enabling a maximum external quantum efficiency of 21.5%.”
This new “paradigm” shift in OLED technology has several positive knock-on effects that will further simply the manufacturing process of OLED displays. Current OLED displays use several layers of specialized materials to help reduce burn-in effects, but the introduction of insulated blue light-emitting diodes means that many of these layers can be deleted entirely from an OLED display, reducing manufacturing costs. This new design is also more power efficient, which should lead to more power-efficient OLED monitors and TVs in the future.
If this new OLED design change proves successful, OLED displays will finally be free from the burn-in issues the technology has had since its inception. Displays could run practically forever and not succumb to any brightness changes or designs “sticking” to the screen.
However, this technology is still in the research phase, so it will take time before we see this design methodology shift to the manufacturing phase, where OLED displays are manufactured with this new design in mind.
“They downvoted him because he spoke the truth.”
One fish, two fish. Red fish, blue fish.
One software, two softwares. One literature, two literatures. One Lego, two Legos. One butter, two butters. One snow, two snows.
and kinda loud
*Zip zop, zip zop, zip zop…*
The frame and wheels of my shopping cart is fine, but the plasticky/canvas bag is torn to shreds and splitting at the seams. Anyone have recommendations for replacement bags?
As a user of sh.itjust.works
, I was unaware of the Cloudflare issue, and I still do not fully understand it. What does Cloudflare do, and what problems does it pose to my instance and the Fediverse as a whole? Should I be petitioning my admins to move to an alternative?
As for the disproportionate size, I think that is somewhat inevitable, even with a Federated platform. There will always be a small number of large instances and a large number of small instances. I’m not sure if size alone is a reason to migrate a community, though if a more active equivalent exists on a smaller instance, that should obviously be celebrated.
It might be interesting to replicate their content here in such a way that it doesn’t link back to them.
That is an interesting idea, but I’m not sure if it would work in this case. Many posts are in a Q&A format, and if a bot were to crosspost all the content here, any answers here wouldn’t necessarily make it back to the OP. Had you considered this? In general, I think that we ought to be strengthening ties between instances rather than weakening them.
“Computer? Computer? Hello, computer?”
I’ve been using a couple Swiss Gear backpacks for ~7 years. They’ve held up quite well so far.
No, but it has several forum-like features. Each Lemmy community is kind of like a mini-forum, with posts, threads, comments, etc. Lemmy is certainly more forum-like than Discord is.
This makes me wonder if there is a centralized system for forums.
Is this not what Lemmy is, to a certain extent?
It went from Twitter to Xitter to Xittier.
Rabbits engage in coprophagy to extract more nutrients using their short digestive tracts. Is this analogous to training ML models on AI-generated output?