3:22 Many people get this wrong. There are 2 content-agnostic algorithms for iterating randomly: - shuffle: randomly-permute a list, then start iterating from the beginning. - pick: randomly selects the next item. The sequence at 3:23 can *NEVER* be the result of a shuffle, unless it's the only item in the playlist, and you force the app to continue "shuffling" after the playlist is exhausted. Rand-Pick doesn't care if it repeats a previous item or even the current item itself, so either sequence is possible under rand-pick. Spotify and other apps use a non-agnostic form of shuffling, which is what makes them feel more unique
Then why is Spotify's shuffle so disgusting. I litterally have 700 songs in my playlist that i listen to almost every single day. I have thousands of hours on Spotify but i swear to God it plays the same songs i always hear. I was told Spotify stores memory of your most listened to songs and "picks" thru that ?
Spotify doesn't have true random shuffle. It gives me songs that I tend to listen more often and some songs I haven't heard in freaking months. It's absolutely pathetic.
@@unrezonableno if there’s a noticeable trend in what’s played then it’s not truly random. It were truly random, all songs would play equally often on shuffle, but spotify adds in a bias for songs you listen to often and recently, making it only somewhat randomized.
@@Leffrey Yeah but the guy I was replying to said that he gets some songs he listens to often, and others that he hasn’t listened to in months. That would mean it’s randomly selecting from the pool of songs, no?
@@LilacMonarchhard disagree. I love when I played downloaded music in my phone was truly random. Now the shuffle algorithm play just a few songs over and over again, and group songs within genres or moods. I want all my songs to be played, and I love chaos when I hit shuffle play
@@HauntedSheppardIt makes me listen less because often the artist's top songs that YT Music pushes harder are not the ones I want to listen to. More than a few cases of that.
I have a playlist of 200 songs in Spotify, I have 7 songs from one band I really like. Shuffle will GUARANTEE that at least 5 of these 7 songs are stuck together (or have like one song between) no matter how many times I shuffle. How people can prefer this over "actual" random, I don't understand.
isn't that what the shuffle algorithm is explicitly designed to avoid? Like I thought the whole point was so that songs from the same artist are not together
This might be irrational but when YTbers flash text on screen matching what they're saying randomly, while at the same time not having subtitles makes me a bit mad honestly. Hard-of-hearing people need subtitles and instead you spend time editing the flashy text. Imagine being deaf watching this, you get random slices of information without being able to access it. It's almost like teasing.
With the Google maps example. It's a matter of of fact that 99% of people who unbox their brand new old gadgets do not follow the tips and tutorials. When you keep these tips and tutorials on in the background. They literally teach you how to use every "hidden feature for each app and use case scenario" like "one handed use cases". That's why we have tons of utubers making bank with videos such as: "here are 1000 things you didn't know about your brand new old devices videos" etc etc.
It's a shame anyone who knows even just 1 little unique thing about a device is labeled as a "power user" or "nerd". People are willing to pay $1k for something, only to blatantly ignore 50% of its features. Being aware of the features is enough, there's no need to use them, but people are too lazy to learn even the simplest things
@@Rudxain people don't generally have a choice between buying a device that just does what they want to do on it and buying one that also does a million other things and has hidden tricks so naturally they'll just learn enough to achieve their basic goals, in the end a common enough user error is a design error and that's how we even got to this point of UI/UX design, otherwise we could just stick to archaic apps and huge manuals. Also guided learning just when you need it is far more effective than learning all the actions first when you've barely started using the product. I think the video game trend of having random tips appear between screens (in loading screens) is good for any app with many button inputs, but it's very uncommon for some reason, even hovering over buttons to get a pop-up stating what they do is rare.
@@tubester358 > "don't generally have a choice" I know, I'm one of them! My intention isn't that people should always learn about the full potential of their devices. I'm complaining about people installing duplicate features because they didn't RTFM. For example, installing a QR scanner when the system already has one 🤦. > "guided learning" I can relate. When I switched from VScode to Helix, I was overwhelmed by the key-binds and modes, so I only learned "intermediate-level" features. If I ever need an "advanced feature" I just read the docs/wiki or Google my use-case. > "hovering over buttons" I made a to-do app with accessibility in mind, so I made extensive use of the HTML `title` attribute! I really love how the UI ended up looking so clean, yet intuitive and descriptive
Some PS's: - Our brains are so hard wired to recognize patterns that truly mathematically random patterns stop _appearing_ random to us. I.e. if you show people two images with a collection of dots, and you ask them which one is more random, most will choose the one where the dots are more evenly spread out. Even though true randomness leads to the opposite and you'd expect some dots to be clustered closer together. Same happens with a random shuffle of music tracks and why _smart shuffle_ is using many more algorithms to select songs than a simple random number generation. - The double tap to zoom gesture also works in Apple Maps. - The keys in iOS keyboards (IDK about Android, but probably there as well) have the same _physical_ size on the display but aren't the same size in software. Since some keys, for example the E or A keys, are pressed much more frequently than others, software will take these statistics into account and also register those keys more likely if you tap in between them or even "mis-tap". It is trained on huge datasets specific to language and your previous inputs to guess what word you're most likely typing and tries to prevent typos before they even happen. If you make all keys the exact size in software as they are shown to you, you'll make many *many* more typos.
The last paragraph…you have answered a question I’ve always had at the back of my mind, but didn’t know how to put. Like I could tell this was happening in my phone but couldn’t put to words how I experienced it. This. Thank you!
Reminds me of the old days, when we had that little LED light on our gameboys and couldn't tell when the battery will suddenly be fully drained and you loose your progress in Pokemon Red Edition
With my (rechargeable) batteries in my GBC I could definitely tell. The LED gets dimmer the weaker the battery is. Once it goes out there's around five minutes left. And when it gets really close to cutting out the background whine in the audio noticeably changes and gets louder.
Right after finally beating Lance on the first play through using Struggle… and then having no idea what’s next because the battery dies at like 11pm under the covers hiding when you should be asleep. 😂
This made me want something that’s the opposite of smart shuffle - a shuffle function that actually prefers similar songs to be played one after the other to prevent mood swings.
That's called making a playlist and listening to it in order. (But I'm someone who has lots of free time and enjoys building playlists. I know not everyone can/wants to put in that much work just to hear music that is mood-ually consistant.)
@@InventorZahran Playlists aren’t random, though. It’d be nice to still have some level of randomness in your listening experience (so that you wouldn’t know in advance what the next song is), just without the constant mood swings.
apple icons switched from being rounded rectangles a long time ago, yeah, but you're absolutely correct about dynamic island being rounded rectangle. You can even see it clearly in the video here 4:55 that island has flat sides and half circles on each side because it extends from circle contact photo and green circle pick up button, while the corners of the phone itself have varied radius especially towards the vertical sides
The typewriter keyboard reason for QWERTY mentioned is actually a common myth and isn't true. There were many different keyboard layouts at the time and QWERTY just caught on the most.
It's not the WHOLE reason but it's certainly one reason that designers may have moved particular keys. It's likely a combination of moving more common keys to easier-to-reach places, preventing keys from getting jammed, and feedback from telegraph operators using it, before settling into its final arrangement with the Remington No. 2
@@omicron1100 Nah it had nothing to do with keys jamming. It actually was an iterative process to find a more comfortable and faster way to type, but it ended up flawed because it fell into a local maxima. It's good enough, but not the best, and that's how it became the most widespread.
@@Toksyuryel We don't know the whole story. To say that key jamming had nothing to do with decisions to move keys would be too presumptuous. I agree that it was not THE reason, but it's hard to believe that it had absolutely no bearing on key placement
i like how you didn't give an answer to the battery percentage display. so now we will all walk around thinking it is some random number generator such that when it hit 0 it will kill your phone.
About text navigation and pressing arrow up/down: Reality is that from programming standpoint, ALL of text are just arrays of characters. So, a word "Hello" is just an array of letters "H", "e", "l", "l", and "o" in an array, they are placed under the order of 0, 1, 2, 3, and 4 respectively. (so character "H" is 0, character "e" is 1, etc). if you have multiple lines of text, these lines are also just multiple arrays of characters. So in other words - every paragraph of text is just a big list of characters. You can get the position of where your cursor (the position where you insert a new character at) is located within the array of characters. For example, let's say we have the two lines of text: ``` I did not hit her! I did not. Oh hi Mark! ``` let's say our cursor is located right before the capital "M" in the word "Mark" on the second line. This means our cursor position is 5 (counting spaces, those are also characters). Then, if a user presses arrow key we could theoretically just move the cursor to the 5th character on the previous line (we can determine the end of a line by a break symbol that isn't visible for end-users)... But reality isn't like this too! If we do exactly that we should end up right before the lowercase "n" in the word "not", but we somehow end up right after it?. It's actually a lot more complicated than that, but to be entirely honest it's not really font dependent either! This stuff is interesting, i recommend reading about it :)
Regarding the sharp rectangular corners of programs: I actually don't associate that with "hostile emotions", I feel like those programs mean business, they were created to get work done and _fast_. A non-rounded UX style often goes hand in hand with a compact layout with less pagination and more information dense interfaces, which I'm a sucker for. I really want the tools I use daily to be efficient and powerful, not some rounded, rubbery toys, where a single setting change would take me 7 clicks and 30s on fancy transition animations. But then, I'm a power user after all, we tend to get forgotten more and more in UX design decisions as time goes on, I feel.
spotify shuffle still sucks even when not "random" i would honestly prefer the comfort of knowing it's truly random rather than have whatever spotify's algo is
@@dan_fvthey can using isotopes and geiger counters to wich you can just set in the room and get between 10 and 20 counts per minute randomly without any other radiation source
Thank you! I've had an excessive and unknown amount of battery construction and use education starting way before Sears sent me to school for batteries. You're the first person on RUclips I've heard mention coulomb counting. Your description is elegantly simple, and accurate.
Dude, the sound effects you use in your videos are oddly satisfying lol I’m too lazy to find the time stamp, but that shutter sound after you talked about a “squircle” activated the ASMR side of my brain 😂
I really expected this to be another over edited mr beast style of exhausting video, but props to you for keeping the retention hacks and jump cuts to a minumum.
I'm sorry, but text looks so much worse on a mac, it took me a lot to get used to it and every time I use windows I am amazed by how sharp the text looks! On macOS it's just blurry, I find it fatiguing not being able to focus on it. They moved away from subpixel rendering when they introduced "more space" resolutions, as it just applies a larger resolution downsampling on a smaller one, otherwise the text would have weird colored borders
@@LilacMonarch I guess people can have different taste, but to me it just seems Apple wanted people not to use third party monitors. To me already on retina display text looks hazy, but try to connect a mac to a normal 24" full HD and text just looks terrible. The perfect thing would be keeping subpixel rendering as an option, like it was the case a couple of macOS versions ago
Unlike what is stated in the video, they both use anti-aliasing. Mac does indeed use a full pixels. Windows too, but goes a step further by breaking up each pixel into its RGB components which gives it 3x the resolution on one of the axises. I believe it's still possible to switch it off, especially on retina displays where the pixels are small enough, but on a low res monitor below 300dpi, Microsoft's solution is actually quite clever and fascinating that aspect of it wasn't the focus of this video.
@@patrikfagard6525 Exactly, Windows (and probably Linux too) use the so called "subpixel rendering", that gives you 3 times the resolution in the anti alias. To me text on an old full HD monitor on windows looks much better than on a MacBook Air despite having probably twice the resolution, on MacOS I feel that my eyes can't focus. Even high dpi monitor to my eyes benefit from that option (on Linux on the same MacBook text seems crisper to me)
The insert key is extremely useful as it can also be used as an alternate shortcut for pasting (Shift-Insert) which on Windows is super useful if you are in a terminal session where CTRL-V would not paste.
Linux too (and hence probably Mac too), CTRL shortcuts and terminal environments generally do not mix. Instead, CTRL-C will immediately halt your program, CTRL-S will freeze it and CTRL-Z will suspend it until you find some way to resume it. Quite the culture shock for people used to graphical programs
I like how I can shoot a photo using double-power button for starting the camera and then volume for shooting. Really helpful in winter to not take off gloves. And comes quite naturally. I guess the volume buttons could be hinted to be used for zoom while driving/navigating.
for chrome users: ctrl + t to open tab ctrl + w to close tab ctrl + n to open new window ctrl + shift + t to open last tab which you closed ctrl + shift + n to open incognito window there are many more useful ones, but PLEASE START USING THESE And another very nice one, middle click a link to open in a new tab I swear, if you have a mouse and you RIGHT CLICK A LINK AND THEN CLICK OPEN IN NEW TAB, IT PAINS ME anyway good luck
Onesto, sei uno dei pochi YT made in italy che ha un accento inglese digeribile, ma impara a non mangiarti le parole. A volte non si capisce nulla perché comunque hai quest'inflessione veramente (personalmente) aggressiva e da saputello. Sembra che mi stai costantemente cercando di vendere qualcosa, ma suoni come un venditore indiano di kebab che pensa di parlare un italiano fluentissimo e perfetto solo perché ogni tanto urla, fa il simpatico, e va talmente veloce che finisce per sbiasciare. Case in point: 9:49. Good luck and keep up the good content.
Double tap to zoom has been a thing for at least 10 years. First time I found out was in Pokémon Go back in 2016 (so 8 years ago) when I was spamming the screen to rotate the view and accidentally started zooming. But seeing that's 8 years ago now I'm surprised more people don't know about it. It's also not limited to just maps, but rather a thing for all apps which have a proper zoom feature, both android and apple.
This guy is fucking delusional. Please don't try to elaborate on his stupid ideas The only reason vr avoids sharp corners is because it's harder to notice blurriness on rounded edges which helps with motion sickness. Unless walking down a street with squared off windows gives you nightmares then go see a doctor.
Spotify's Shuffle is even more garbage than that. It doesn't just avoid interesting coincidences, it also considers what you have listened to recently, and biases the shuffle to play those songs more often. Which is absolutely asinine, because lots of people don't like to hear the same songs over and over again.
@@Buckets41369 That is another factor, yes. These corrupt corporations ruin algorithms, like Google does with search results, because their monopoly on raising capital lets them ignore the need for customer good will.
Most Windows text made me barf. When I had to use a Windows computer at my job I changed the system font from MS Sans to Tahoma because Tahoma was the only non-ugly font.
This guys puts on video every little thought I had about tech. Glad to know I wasn’t the only one thinking about it. Just didn’t have the formal education about it.
WOW! your cursor up/down info is a game-changer for me! not only earned my subscription but helped me understand what's going on when I'm using it to test end-of-line alignment in my books…! thank you!
Dude, I must say - I watched most of your videos for an hour now, you're a video genius - thanks for sharing all of this knowledge, I enjoyed every minute.
That blue and orange stuff is there to essentially triple the resolution of your screen in one direction when it comes to text rendering! Every pixel is made of three differently-colored bars (usually. some screen have different layouts, but you'll generally see it as vertical bars). If you were to render a shade of grey, you would have to use all three bars. However, you COULD just darken the bars that would be contained within the letter, and keep the remaining ones lit up. That does mean the edges usually aren't grey, but it serves to make it crisper and more legible, due to the increase in resolution.
why MS paint keeps the orange and blue edges even though the image is being rendered as pixels and not as paths, I have no clue. probably just reused the text renderer windows uses by default and didn't bother to change it.
I actually thought the more soft shape would be called kiki, because it kinda sounds like a name for a stuffed animal or a pet which are cute and playful
You might be interested to know, there's an effect called Kiki-Bouba effect where compared to the other, the name Kiki is generally associated with spiky and pointed entities while Bouba is associated with round entities. This is an example of mental association between speech and visual shapes. Edit : Ahhhh my Comment probably doesn't make sense now, when I wrote it I didn't reach the point where the video mentioned exactly that lol-
12:05 "Insert" does stuff (at least on windows and linux): switch between replace characters and insert characters mode in text editors some file managers (far manager, midnight commander, double commander, total commander) mark selected file and move selection down
@@СергейСемёнов-я9у shift+insert is paste from CLIPBOARD in konsole, kate, cudatext and a lot more programs shit+insert is paste from PRIMARY in xterm ctrl+shift+insert is paste from PRIMARY in konsole, kate PRIMARY is like another clipboard that most programs copy to when you select text and paste from when click mouse wheel
15:45 Thank you steve for creating a closed and overpriced operating system and then optimizing the software only for that closed ecosystem. We're really happy.
Dude the way you make videos is so interesting. I love how the title of the video is just a hook for more relevant facts. Then you find a way to segway it into another video. It's absolutely genius
huh thats why my battery on linux is a little lower then windows some times intresting i always thought it was my driver support but no well im pretty sure the whole battery thing dossent really apply to laptops anyway mainly only phones unelss you install a linux distro on your pinephone or android phone
The laptop battery indications shown on Linux and Windows are both delivered from ACPI. This comes directly from the smart controller in the battery pack itself. This uses coulomb counting and I don't know why our host says this doesn't work.
An unloaded battery (low consumed current) has a falling voltage with decreasing state of charge. It bottoms out at somewhere between 3.0 and 3.3V depending on chemistry and tops out at somewhere between 4.2 and 4.4V depending on planned endurance and chemistry. Now obviously the consumed current varies continuously, and you can't just have the battery percentage jumping around rather than decreasing smoothly, so there is some load correction and filtering going on. I remember Blender version 2.0 around 23 years ago. You had to print out the keyboard cheat sheet and slowly learn it, because most of the functionality was not available except by keyboard :D But once you did it was like having a direct connection from your brain into 3D, it was amazing!
This is genuinely such a good vide. Not only is it so well made, but the content itself is fascinating and could be interesting to anyone - tech enthusiast or not.
Probably not your passwords, but if you open a confidential document in a pdf reader with built-in AI chatbot (such as Microsoft Edge) then yes it may be sent to their servers and you may have constituted an NDA breach or similar
Batteries are one of the most important components of our tech and the most understated. Yes, we say the most important is the CPU or the GPU... those are important and have a lot of development, but those don't work without electrical current... so are useless. Li-ion is the battery of our tech... but they have 2 problems: 1) They heat when you are using them, and they could burn themselves when you are using your tech (so all our tech products have circuits to prevent that) 2) Have a limited lifespan, around 500 cycles, which seems a lot. But our cell phones use all the change in a day, so if the phone is at 40% or 20%, we charge at night to have a full charge in the morning. So if our phones use all the charge every day, 500 cycles will be over in 2 years. So in 2 years, you will change your battery or your cellphone. I have enough knowledge of batteries to know how they take voltage and temperature measurements; if I did that every day, I would know how they are; that takes time, dedication, and a Ph.D. But the computational power of our cell phones is higher than our computers of 20 years ago... So on the iPhones ( I don't know other companies), Apple spends a lot of information on the actual usage of your battery, the temperature, the brand, and the data of thousands of users to correct the battery charge in your screen... It is not a guess; it is an algorithm with a lot of variables to give only 2 numbers (the charge and the number of cycles of your battery) to give you the right to decide: a) I will still be with my phone b) I will change the battery c) I will change the phone... but not only that, thousands of users give a lot of data, so the iPhones also know the Amperage that they use every moment and connect or deactivate circuits to increase the life of your battery. But the primordial function of those that don't communicate changes is the usefulness of your cellphone to you. So after years of usage of it if you think that your iPhone was a good value, you will buy another one of the same brand. Android phones use open software, so if you want to use that feature, you will share it with all the companies, and they improve its value for the money you spend developing that system. This is an advantage for the user but not for the company. Also, if you don't want to include those sensors, that feature is no longer appropriate for you, so big companies like Samsung pay for personalized Android versions.
@@DoomFinger511Yeah I think it's 1000 cycles. Also different charge states, temperature, discharge rate contribute differently to the cycle. Like 30-50% is a lower cycle than 80-100% at x°c and so on
@@sandysan4191 I did a little research, when they say 500 or 1000 cycles it means from 0%-100% or vice-versa. Since people rarely charge their phone from 0% (and most phones tell you it's at 0% when it's really around 5%) it actually take several charges before it's consider 1 cycle.
It's an average, basically a lot of batteries fail early on, and it drives the average way down. If it has already survived 200 cycles, it will probably survive hundreds more
Rounded corners in AR also works due to how peripheral vision works. Rounded corners disappear into the background when you look past them with peripheral vision. Sharp window corners does the opposite - loudly nagging away at your peripheral vision while you look at something else past it.
The fact that the QWERTY layout was designed to avoid typewriter jamming is not 100% accurate. Here is a nice video that also quickly shows QWERTY layout evolution: ruclips.net/video/188fipF-i5I/видео.html
Also, there was indeed alphabetic order, that's why we have DFGHJKL following each other, just with E and I moved to the upper row in order for salesmen to be able to type TYPEWRITER more conveniently
Finally someone said it! I saw this video too a while ago and now I get really annoyed whenever people incorrectly share their "facts" about keyboard layouts. Your comment should be pinned.
This video is so underrated. I watched every minute with much pleasure and gathering cool information. I’m going to watch other video of yours because if they’re all like this you’re definitely growing as a RUclipsr
The Scroll Lock key does have a use in most spreadsheet programs. Turn Scroll Lock _off_ and your cursor keys will move your cell selection. Turn Scroll Lock _on_ and your cursor keys will move the sheet, but the currently selected cell will stay the same. Much like when you use the scroll bars with the mouse.
7:15 You actually saved me by teaching me this now. I've never knew this method of zooming in and out actually existed in Google Maps, this is going to prevent so many future headaches!!
The shuffle is true , I always listen on pc nowdays so it's easier. Rejecting convinience for sake of control People like me will suffer and return back when needed but same for movies and games and other stuff. Rejecting ease of use creates more control and optimization. Nobody wants you to buy movies or games in CD , and worse nowday you only get the download authorization , not the CD ! or online activation.. Lots of nice videos from you btw, your exactly the channel I wanna watch because i'm also obscess over design and human psych behind those design. It's the little things.. I have been addicted to social media and even then I knew what was the reason. same with gacha games , I literally knew those games had casino kind of stuff . These videos didn't 360 my life but lots of helpful stuff. I'm always Grey when it comes to how good I handle things. I can be a addict or basically the wrong user of something and yet learn or soon grow out of it. Addiction is hard to quit but I'm able to quit quickly but re-addict if I get bored again. Boredom however is needed for creativity. And I know my comment isn't consistent. That's what I am . My brain overthinking and my above comment is mix of lots of things , probably some out of topic with the video. That itself is a psychology :))
I've learned the double tap zoom just a few weeks ago... I was extremely flabbergasted, and everyone I asked about this, never knew that this was a thing either 😂
Omg i came to get informed, but i acquired is to get to know a man who has no concerns in showing that he listened to Lateralus in his RUclips video. Keep Spiraling out, my friend
9:56 - Having learned zsh/bash (which share 99.9% feature-wise, and are the default command line shells on MacOS and Linux respectively), I think that some use cases are inherently served better through the command line. Anything involving tons of obnoxious steps, repetition, large amounts of data, or configuring a metric ton of options tends to lend itself to a command line interface. I would explain, but honestly it's a hard sell to learn time wise because it's not always obvious how it can be helpful, despite it being one of my best skills for boosting my productivity on a computer personally. We lost something when most apps abandoned the command line!
i did not plan to watch this entire vid, but the thumbnail made me curious. well done mate, i really am stunned by this info. i don't normally sub to tech channels, but ya got me..
Use Raycast for free at: ray.so/enrico
or grab one of the 15 links for a discount on the premium version in the description
Raycast is an absolute W of a sponsor choice
13:28 I mean, everyone knows what boob(a/s) are, right? Isn't it obvious that one will think about the "round things" here while hearing "booba"? 😀
How dare you insult us superior dvorak users.
the double tap zoom works on Apple Maps too. You should probably tell people that!
Squircle is your bthole
3:22 Many people get this wrong. There are 2 content-agnostic algorithms for iterating randomly:
- shuffle: randomly-permute a list, then start iterating from the beginning.
- pick: randomly selects the next item.
The sequence at 3:23 can *NEVER* be the result of a shuffle, unless it's the only item in the playlist, and you force the app to continue "shuffling" after the playlist is exhausted.
Rand-Pick doesn't care if it repeats a previous item or even the current item itself, so either sequence is possible under rand-pick.
Spotify and other apps use a non-agnostic form of shuffling, which is what makes them feel more unique
Then why is Spotify's shuffle so disgusting. I litterally have 700 songs in my playlist that i listen to almost every single day. I have thousands of hours on Spotify but i swear to God it plays the same songs i always hear. I was told Spotify stores memory of your most listened to songs and "picks" thru that ?
Spotify doesn't have true random shuffle. It gives me songs that I tend to listen more often and some songs I haven't heard in freaking months. It's absolutely pathetic.
@@deivytrajan Doesn’t that mean it’s random?
@@unrezonableno if there’s a noticeable trend in what’s played then it’s not truly random. It were truly random, all songs would play equally often on shuffle, but spotify adds in a bias for songs you listen to often and recently, making it only somewhat randomized.
@@Leffrey Yeah but the guy I was replying to said that he gets some songs he listens to often, and others that he hasn’t listened to in months. That would mean it’s randomly selecting from the pool of songs, no?
8:10 the like button didnt light up,
it never dose
yea...... same for me XD
lol yea i feel like ppl are lying about it
true... it usded to light up, WHY^'D YOU REMOVE SUCH AN AMAZING FEATURE RUclips?!?!?!
@@SquooshyShark1000 it did work in other videos, but the phrase must be subscribe button, not only, subscribe
This combines everything I love: Tech, Design, Fun Facts, and a few life hacks. Peak content.
Ifkr
This comment. This comment right here.
Yeah I love Tech and Design so much. I obscess over Art , and also love tech and spec nerd.
Not sure why we are throwing shuffle and random on the same pile. They should give both options, a true random and a shuffle
true random is pretty useless for that purpose honestly
yeah then you have to explain to the end user what the mathematical difference is and thats when it fails
@@LilacMonarchhard disagree. I love when I played downloaded music in my phone was truly random. Now the shuffle algorithm play just a few songs over and over again, and group songs within genres or moods. I want all my songs to be played, and I love chaos when I hit shuffle play
But then they can't feed you music that makes you listen longer
@@HauntedSheppardIt makes me listen less because often the artist's top songs that YT Music pushes harder are not the ones I want to listen to. More than a few cases of that.
I have a playlist of 200 songs in Spotify, I have 7 songs from one band I really like. Shuffle will GUARANTEE that at least 5 of these 7 songs are stuck together (or have like one song between) no matter how many times I shuffle.
How people can prefer this over "actual" random, I don't understand.
Old post, but I am with you. I just end up skipping the song lol.
I have no idea, i get around that problem by just searching true shuffle for spotify on google and it makes my playlist random.
Seems to me that Spotify just uses a really bad version of shuffle. Because I have never had this happen on other services
Yup
isn't that what the shuffle algorithm is explicitly designed to avoid? Like I thought the whole point was so that songs from the same artist are not together
It's funny how Nokia of all companies was the first to use squircles throughout the entire UI design. Poor Meego.
Enrico: Just double tap and drag, you can zoom in
me: WHAT????
Enrico: The first time I've learnt this I was like: I'm sorry, what??
me: EXACTLY
That thing is a gamechanger. Also, it works anywhere you can zoom to pinch (e.g. photos)
@@enricotartarotti I feel like when I learned Ctrl+Shift+T back then
was i lucky to know about this long back while watching tips and tricks videos
@@enricotartarotti hahaha I instantly tried it on RUclips mobile where I'm watching your video and found the one place it DOESN'T work
🤯
This might be irrational but when YTbers flash text on screen matching what they're saying randomly, while at the same time not having subtitles makes me a bit mad honestly. Hard-of-hearing people need subtitles and instead you spend time editing the flashy text. Imagine being deaf watching this, you get random slices of information without being able to access it. It's almost like teasing.
Skill issue tbh
Auto captions are always available. Womp womp. Invalid comment.
thats life in comic sans font 😂
@@i.v.c.hYes, but they tend to be inaccurate...
@@awv4nm6Ableism issue
With the Google maps example. It's a matter of of fact that 99% of people who unbox their brand new old gadgets do not follow the tips and tutorials. When you keep these tips and tutorials on in the background. They literally teach you how to use every "hidden feature for each app and use case scenario" like "one handed use cases". That's why we have tons of utubers making bank with videos such as: "here are 1000 things you didn't know about your brand new old devices videos" etc etc.
It's a shame anyone who knows even just 1 little unique thing about a device is labeled as a "power user" or "nerd". People are willing to pay $1k for something, only to blatantly ignore 50% of its features. Being aware of the features is enough, there's no need to use them, but people are too lazy to learn even the simplest things
@@Rudxain people don't generally have a choice between buying a device that just does what they want to do on it and buying one that also does a million other things and has hidden tricks so naturally they'll just learn enough to achieve their basic goals, in the end a common enough user error is a design error and that's how we even got to this point of UI/UX design, otherwise we could just stick to archaic apps and huge manuals. Also guided learning just when you need it is far more effective than learning all the actions first when you've barely started using the product.
I think the video game trend of having random tips appear between screens (in loading screens) is good for any app with many button inputs, but it's very uncommon for some reason, even hovering over buttons to get a pop-up stating what they do is rare.
@@tubester358 > "don't generally have a choice"
I know, I'm one of them! My intention isn't that people should always learn about the full potential of their devices. I'm complaining about people installing duplicate features because they didn't RTFM. For example, installing a QR scanner when the system already has one 🤦.
> "guided learning"
I can relate. When I switched from VScode to Helix, I was overwhelmed by the key-binds and modes, so I only learned "intermediate-level" features. If I ever need an "advanced feature" I just read the docs/wiki or Google my use-case.
> "hovering over buttons"
I made a to-do app with accessibility in mind, so I made extensive use of the HTML `title` attribute! I really love how the UI ended up looking so clean, yet intuitive and descriptive
Solid comment if and only if Google has this scroll gesture as part of their intro tutorials
@@tubester358 My reply got deleted.
I agree! It's just that some people bloat their devices by installing apps that duplicate built-in functionality
Some PS's:
- Our brains are so hard wired to recognize patterns that truly mathematically random patterns stop _appearing_ random to us. I.e. if you show people two images with a collection of dots, and you ask them which one is more random, most will choose the one where the dots are more evenly spread out. Even though true randomness leads to the opposite and you'd expect some dots to be clustered closer together. Same happens with a random shuffle of music tracks and why _smart shuffle_ is using many more algorithms to select songs than a simple random number generation.
- The double tap to zoom gesture also works in Apple Maps.
- The keys in iOS keyboards (IDK about Android, but probably there as well) have the same _physical_ size on the display but aren't the same size in software. Since some keys, for example the E or A keys, are pressed much more frequently than others, software will take these statistics into account and also register those keys more likely if you tap in between them or even "mis-tap". It is trained on huge datasets specific to language and your previous inputs to guess what word you're most likely typing and tries to prevent typos before they even happen. If you make all keys the exact size in software as they are shown to you, you'll make many *many* more typos.
The last paragraph…you have answered a question I’ve always had at the back of my mind, but didn’t know how to put. Like I could tell this was happening in my phone but couldn’t put to words how I experienced it. This. Thank you!
8:02 skill issue
Reminds me of the old days, when we had that little LED light on our gameboys and couldn't tell when the battery will suddenly be fully drained and you loose your progress in Pokemon Red Edition
With my (rechargeable) batteries in my GBC I could definitely tell. The LED gets dimmer the weaker the battery is. Once it goes out there's around five minutes left. And when it gets really close to cutting out the background whine in the audio noticeably changes and gets louder.
Right after finally beating Lance on the first play through using Struggle… and then having no idea what’s next because the battery dies at like 11pm under the covers hiding when you should be asleep. 😂
This made me want something that’s the opposite of smart shuffle - a shuffle function that actually prefers similar songs to be played one after the other to prevent mood swings.
That's called making a playlist and listening to it in order. (But I'm someone who has lots of free time and enjoys building playlists. I know not everyone can/wants to put in that much work just to hear music that is mood-ually consistant.)
@@InventorZahran Playlists aren’t random, though. It’d be nice to still have some level of randomness in your listening experience (so that you wouldn’t know in advance what the next song is), just without the constant mood swings.
. . . it's a rounded rectangle. Fight me.
I’m not gonna fight you because your correct
it's a squirtle ngl
It is. A squircle is a square with extreme rounded corners.
A rounded rectangle is just that as well, a rectangle with extreme rounded corners
apple icons switched from being rounded rectangles a long time ago, yeah, but you're absolutely correct about dynamic island being rounded rectangle. You can even see it clearly in the video here 4:55 that island has flat sides and half circles on each side because it extends from circle contact photo and green circle pick up button, while the corners of the phone itself have varied radius especially towards the vertical sides
Its a splincle
enrico never realized he can actually remove i am an island boy from his playlist
Talking about the keyboard... Did you know that in France, we don't have the QWERTY layout but have the AZERTY layout instead ?
And certain countries use QWERTZ.
@@patrickreuvekampAs far as I know only German speaking ones
and azerty has even more useless keys like a dedicated key for ²
Noo, I thought we here in belgium were the only ones with azerty! I always order from Dutch stores when buying keyboard related stuff.
@@Shouko91 well, i guess Belgium is not the only one having AZERTY... 😅 ( And France too ! )
The typewriter keyboard reason for QWERTY mentioned is actually a common myth and isn't true. There were many different keyboard layouts at the time and QWERTY just caught on the most.
It's not the WHOLE reason but it's certainly one reason that designers may have moved particular keys. It's likely a combination of moving more common keys to easier-to-reach places, preventing keys from getting jammed, and feedback from telegraph operators using it, before settling into its final arrangement with the Remington No. 2
im testing dvorak to write this and its strange
@@omicron1100 Nah it had nothing to do with keys jamming. It actually was an iterative process to find a more comfortable and faster way to type, but it ended up flawed because it fell into a local maxima. It's good enough, but not the best, and that's how it became the most widespread.
@@Toksyuryel We don't know the whole story. To say that key jamming had nothing to do with decisions to move keys would be too presumptuous. I agree that it was not THE reason, but it's hard to believe that it had absolutely no bearing on key placement
@@omicron1100 Atomic Frontier has a great video about it ruclips.net/video/188fipF-i5I/видео.html
5:20 That riff, the reverb, the heightening intensity.. it was just, perfection
i like how you didn't give an answer to the battery percentage display. so now we will all walk around thinking it is some random number generator such that when it hit 0 it will kill your phone.
it usually does a decent job of estimating, as long as your battery's not completely trashed then the nearest 5-10% is usually accurate enough
@@LilacMonarch what if we are mistaking cause and effect? I mean, what if the display kills the battery?
@@shaunmodipane1 kill it how? checking voltage is super passive
1:03 thats why sometimes my phone dies at 5%
About text navigation and pressing arrow up/down:
Reality is that from programming standpoint, ALL of text are just arrays of characters.
So, a word "Hello" is just an array of letters "H", "e", "l", "l", and "o" in an array, they are placed under the order of 0, 1, 2, 3, and 4 respectively. (so character "H" is 0, character "e" is 1, etc).
if you have multiple lines of text, these lines are also just multiple arrays of characters. So in other words - every paragraph of text is just a big list of characters.
You can get the position of where your cursor (the position where you insert a new character at) is located within the array of characters.
For example, let's say we have the two lines of text:
```
I did not hit her! I did not.
Oh hi Mark!
```
let's say our cursor is located right before the capital "M" in the word "Mark" on the second line. This means our cursor position is 5 (counting spaces, those are also characters). Then, if a user presses arrow key we could theoretically just move the cursor to the 5th character on the previous line (we can determine the end of a line by a break symbol
that isn't visible for end-users)... But reality isn't like this too! If we do exactly that we should end up right before the lowercase "n" in the word "not", but we somehow end up right after it?. It's actually a lot more complicated than that, but to be entirely honest it's not really font dependent either!
This stuff is interesting, i recommend reading about it :)
Texts were always that way, simply out :D
Regarding the sharp rectangular corners of programs:
I actually don't associate that with "hostile emotions", I feel like those programs mean business, they were created to get work done and _fast_.
A non-rounded UX style often goes hand in hand with a compact layout with less pagination and more information dense interfaces, which I'm a sucker for. I really want the tools I use daily to be efficient and powerful, not some rounded, rubbery toys, where a single setting change would take me 7 clicks and 30s on fancy transition animations.
But then, I'm a power user after all, we tend to get forgotten more and more in UX design decisions as time goes on, I feel.
gosh you must really hate LCARS then, lol
spotify shuffle still sucks even when not "random" i would honestly prefer the comfort of knowing it's truly random rather than have whatever spotify's algo is
computers cannot generate true randomness though :(
@@dan_fvthey can using isotopes and geiger counters to wich you can just set in the room and get between 10 and 20 counts per minute randomly without any other radiation source
Don't forget that Apple doesn't update the battery percentage correctly between 80-100% to "reduce battery anxiety" in users
When people think of the word "random" the definition they think of is often more akin to "chaotic"
Thank you! I've had an excessive and unknown amount of battery construction and use education starting way before Sears sent me to school for batteries. You're the first person on RUclips I've heard mention coulomb counting. Your description is elegantly simple, and accurate.
Dude, the sound effects you use in your videos are oddly satisfying lol I’m too lazy to find the time stamp, but that shutter sound after you talked about a “squircle” activated the ASMR side of my brain 😂
I really expected this to be another over edited mr beast style of exhausting video, but props to you for keeping the retention hacks and jump cuts to a minumum.
I'm sorry, but text looks so much worse on a mac, it took me a lot to get used to it and every time I use windows I am amazed by how sharp the text looks! On macOS it's just blurry, I find it fatiguing not being able to focus on it. They moved away from subpixel rendering when they introduced "more space" resolutions, as it just applies a larger resolution downsampling on a smaller one, otherwise the text would have weird colored borders
it's a matter of taste, it's the classic sharpness vs smoothness question. there's never a perfect answer everyone will like
@@LilacMonarch I guess people can have different taste, but to me it just seems Apple wanted people not to use third party monitors. To me already on retina display text looks hazy, but try to connect a mac to a normal 24" full HD and text just looks terrible. The perfect thing would be keeping subpixel rendering as an option, like it was the case a couple of macOS versions ago
@@karellen00 yeah they definitely don't care about other monitors. apple hates anything not made by them lmao
Unlike what is stated in the video, they both use anti-aliasing. Mac does indeed use a full pixels. Windows too, but goes a step further by breaking up each pixel into its RGB components which gives it 3x the resolution on one of the axises. I believe it's still possible to switch it off, especially on retina displays where the pixels are small enough, but on a low res monitor below 300dpi, Microsoft's solution is actually quite clever and fascinating that aspect of it wasn't the focus of this video.
@@patrikfagard6525 Exactly, Windows (and probably Linux too) use the so called "subpixel rendering", that gives you 3 times the resolution in the anti alias. To me text on an old full HD monitor on windows looks much better than on a MacBook Air despite having probably twice the resolution, on MacOS I feel that my eyes can't focus. Even high dpi monitor to my eyes benefit from that option (on Linux on the same MacBook text seems crisper to me)
1:30 great way to set your hair on fire
😂
*1:32
15:48 As always, fanboy's reasoning to making their thing is better, is something completely irrelevant
The insert key is extremely useful as it can also be used as an alternate shortcut for pasting (Shift-Insert) which on Windows is super useful if you are in a terminal session where CTRL-V would not paste.
Linux too (and hence probably Mac too), CTRL shortcuts and terminal environments generally do not mix. Instead, CTRL-C will immediately halt your program, CTRL-S will freeze it and CTRL-Z will suspend it until you find some way to resume it. Quite the culture shock for people used to graphical programs
Ctrl+Ins to copy, Shift+Ins to paste. I remember those days, lol.
On Linux terminals, you can use CTRL-Shift-V to paste
13:44 I actually thought the opposite and thought the sharp one was call boubou cause it reminded me on an explosion (boom)
in a lot of google apps can you double tab and slide to zoom and zoom out, google photos does also support it
I literally had the Google Maps zooming problem today, THANK YOU for showing that. Now we just need a gesture for one-handed rotation
They could literally make it a sideways motion. Up down to drag, sideways to rotate.
Move touch in a circle...
@@Goodgu3963 exactly what i was thinking. vertical swipe to zoom, horizontal swipe to rotate
I like how I can shoot a photo using double-power button for starting the camera and then volume for shooting. Really helpful in winter to not take off gloves. And comes quite naturally.
I guess the volume buttons could be hinted to be used for zoom while driving/navigating.
for chrome users:
ctrl + t to open tab
ctrl + w to close tab
ctrl + n to open new window
ctrl + shift + t to open last tab which you closed
ctrl + shift + n to open incognito window
there are many more useful ones, but PLEASE START USING THESE
And another very nice one, middle click a link to open in a new tab
I swear, if you have a mouse and you RIGHT CLICK A LINK AND THEN CLICK OPEN IN NEW TAB, IT PAINS ME
anyway good luck
do people not know these
As a trackpad user, I must add that also simply Ctrl+click opens the link in a new tab in the background. Saved countless hours
also shift + tab to cycle between tabs
@@asdfghjklqzwx sadly, yes
And it pains me when someone fumbles around with a mouse to open or close tabs
@@faccc yes
Onesto, sei uno dei pochi YT made in italy che ha un accento inglese digeribile, ma impara a non mangiarti le parole. A volte non si capisce nulla perché comunque hai quest'inflessione veramente (personalmente) aggressiva e da saputello. Sembra che mi stai costantemente cercando di vendere qualcosa, ma suoni come un venditore indiano di kebab che pensa di parlare un italiano fluentissimo e perfetto solo perché ogni tanto urla, fa il simpatico, e va talmente veloce che finisce per sbiasciare. Case in point: 9:49.
Good luck and keep up the good content.
11:04
bro thought we won't notice the rickroll💀
Double tap to zoom has been a thing for at least 10 years. First time I found out was in Pokémon Go back in 2016 (so 8 years ago) when I was spamming the screen to rotate the view and accidentally started zooming. But seeing that's 8 years ago now I'm surprised more people don't know about it. It's also not limited to just maps, but rather a thing for all apps which have a proper zoom feature, both android and apple.
13:50 Also only now I noticed that Bouba may seem weak while Kiki seems strong/useful. That might explain my distaste for soft corner interfaces.
This guy is fucking delusional. Please don't try to elaborate on his stupid ideas The only reason vr avoids sharp corners is because it's harder to notice blurriness on rounded edges which helps with motion sickness.
Unless walking down a street with squared off windows gives you nightmares then go see a doctor.
Spotify's Shuffle is even more garbage than that.
It doesn't just avoid interesting coincidences, it also considers what you have listened to recently, and biases the shuffle to play those songs more often.
Which is absolutely asinine, because lots of people don't like to hear the same songs over and over again.
The Spotify shuffle algorithm biases towards deals they make with record labels to boost “listens” so the song climbs the charts
@@Buckets41369 That is another factor, yes.
These corrupt corporations ruin algorithms, like Google does with search results, because their monopoly on raising capital lets them ignore the need for customer good will.
14:48 nah it doesnt text on wimdows looks better
Absolutely! Windows text is sharp, Mac's is blurred.
@@kamczak89 exactly
That's because it is zoomed in. If you compare it in the original size it looks sharper on the Mac. Try it.
Most Windows text made me barf. When I had to use a Windows computer at my job I changed the system font from MS Sans to Tahoma because Tahoma was the only non-ugly font.
@@Boodlums tf you mean
This guys puts on video every little thought I had about tech. Glad to know I wasn’t the only one thinking about it. Just didn’t have the formal education about it.
7:31 the Arm veins
WOW! your cursor up/down info is a game-changer for me! not only earned my subscription but helped me understand what's going on when I'm using it to test end-of-line alignment in my books…! thank you!
13:25 Nice Tom Scott reference but he also made a followup where he admitted that that study was unable to be repeated
This isn't a Tom Scott reference, it was a study which Tom Scott referenced.
He said that the "language affects the way you think" studies were not repeatable, he didn't say that about the Bouba-Kiki study
Interesting video, thanks for sharing! The subscribe/like button highlight didn't work for me, maybe it takes some time to process it!
It didn’t work for me because I already liked and subscribed 😉
This ad integration was so smooth and well placed. Nice planning!
Dude, I must say - I watched most of your videos for an hour now, you're a video genius - thanks for sharing all of this knowledge, I enjoyed every minute.
15:32 Finally, text without the blue and orange stuff around it
That blue and orange stuff is there to essentially triple the resolution of your screen in one direction when it comes to text rendering! Every pixel is made of three differently-colored bars (usually. some screen have different layouts, but you'll generally see it as vertical bars). If you were to render a shade of grey, you would have to use all three bars. However, you COULD just darken the bars that would be contained within the letter, and keep the remaining ones lit up. That does mean the edges usually aren't grey, but it serves to make it crisper and more legible, due to the increase in resolution.
why MS paint keeps the orange and blue edges even though the image is being rendered as pixels and not as paths, I have no clue. probably just reused the text renderer windows uses by default and didn't bother to change it.
@@existenceispain_geekthesiren ohh
Who knew the simple battery percentage on our phones hid such a wild engineering backstory!
me
I actually thought the more soft shape would be called kiki, because it kinda sounds like a name for a stuffed animal or a pet which are cute and playful
You might be interested to know, there's an effect called Kiki-Bouba effect where compared to the other, the name Kiki is generally associated with spiky and pointed entities while Bouba is associated with round entities. This is an example of mental association between speech and visual shapes.
Edit : Ahhhh my Comment probably doesn't make sense now, when I wrote it I didn't reach the point where the video mentioned exactly that lol-
I think about these things so often, especially the text editing(in Xcode) and battery ones
12:05 "Insert" does stuff (at least on windows and linux):
switch between replace characters and insert characters mode in text editors
some file managers (far manager, midnight commander, double commander, total commander) mark selected file and move selection down
also shift+insert is a shortcut for "paste from clipboard", which also works in windows console
@@СергейСемёнов-я9у
shift+insert is paste from CLIPBOARD in konsole, kate, cudatext and a lot more programs
shit+insert is paste from PRIMARY in xterm
ctrl+shift+insert is paste from PRIMARY in konsole, kate
PRIMARY is like another clipboard that most programs copy to when you select text and paste from when click mouse wheel
Finally a video of things you didn’t know that I DIDN’T KNOW. Grandissimo Enrico!
15:45 Thank you steve for creating a closed and overpriced operating system and then optimizing the software only for that closed ecosystem. We're really happy.
There were like 15 different concepts in this one video that could have been made into 15 different videos... New sub.
10:17 Cybertruck spotted 😂
Dude the way you make videos is so interesting. I love how the title of the video is just a hook for more relevant facts. Then you find a way to segway it into another video. It's absolutely genius
1:13 I KNEW IT, FINALLY SOMEONE CONFIRMED IT
N!? Hi :)
7:11 times like these that I miss the small 1-handed phones
at least the battery charge reported by the linux kernel isn't wrong and it's open source too
huh thats why my battery on linux is a little lower then windows some times intresting i always thought it was my driver support but no well im pretty sure the whole battery thing dossent really apply to laptops anyway mainly only phones unelss you install a linux distro on your pinephone or android phone
The laptop battery indications shown on Linux and Windows are both delivered from ACPI. This comes directly from the smart controller in the battery pack itself. This uses coulomb counting and I don't know why our host says this doesn't work.
An unloaded battery (low consumed current) has a falling voltage with decreasing state of charge. It bottoms out at somewhere between 3.0 and 3.3V depending on chemistry and tops out at somewhere between 4.2 and 4.4V depending on planned endurance and chemistry. Now obviously the consumed current varies continuously, and you can't just have the battery percentage jumping around rather than decreasing smoothly, so there is some load correction and filtering going on.
I remember Blender version 2.0 around 23 years ago. You had to print out the keyboard cheat sheet and slowly learn it, because most of the functionality was not available except by keyboard :D But once you did it was like having a direct connection from your brain into 3D, it was amazing!
*insert Leonardo DiCaprio pointing meme
Tool- Lateralus
This is genuinely such a good vide. Not only is it so well made, but the content itself is fascinating and could be interesting to anyone - tech enthusiast or not.
11:42 if GPT-4 runs on server and not locally, can ai knowing what is on computer leak passwords or other private stuff?
Probably not your passwords, but if you open a confidential document in a pdf reader with built-in AI chatbot (such as Microsoft Edge) then yes it may be sent to their servers and you may have constituted an NDA breach or similar
@@alex15095Google does that so who cares
DUDE SOLVED SO MANY OF MY LIFE QUESTIONS IN ONE VIDEO !!!! I always used to feel that something is really off about apple shapes..... Thanks alot
Batteries are one of the most important components of our tech and the most understated. Yes, we say the most important is the CPU or the GPU... those are important and have a lot of development, but those don't work without electrical current... so are useless.
Li-ion is the battery of our tech... but they have 2 problems:
1) They heat when you are using them, and they could burn themselves when you are using your tech (so all our tech products have circuits to prevent that)
2) Have a limited lifespan, around 500 cycles, which seems a lot. But our cell phones use all the change in a day, so if the phone is at 40% or 20%, we charge at night to have a full charge in the morning. So if our phones use all the charge every day, 500 cycles will be over in 2 years. So in 2 years, you will change your battery or your cellphone.
I have enough knowledge of batteries to know how they take voltage and temperature measurements; if I did that every day, I would know how they are; that takes time, dedication, and a Ph.D. But the computational power of our cell phones is higher than our computers of 20 years ago...
So on the iPhones ( I don't know other companies), Apple spends a lot of information on the actual usage of your battery, the temperature, the brand, and the data of thousands of users to correct the battery charge in your screen... It is not a guess; it is an algorithm with a lot of variables to give only 2 numbers (the charge and the number of cycles of your battery) to give you the right to decide: a) I will still be with my phone b) I will change the battery c) I will change the phone... but not only that, thousands of users give a lot of data, so the iPhones also know the Amperage that they use every moment and connect or deactivate circuits to increase the life of your battery. But the primordial function of those that don't communicate changes is the usefulness of your cellphone to you.
So after years of usage of it if you think that your iPhone was a good value, you will buy another one of the same brand.
Android phones use open software, so if you want to use that feature, you will share it with all the companies, and they improve its value for the money you spend developing that system. This is an advantage for the user but not for the company. Also, if you don't want to include those sensors, that feature is no longer appropriate for you, so big companies like Samsung pay for personalized Android versions.
500 cycles doesn't seem correct for a battery. I've had my s20 ultra for 5 years now and have definitely charged it over 500 times.
@@DoomFinger511Yeah I think it's 1000 cycles. Also different charge states, temperature, discharge rate contribute differently to the cycle. Like 30-50% is a lower cycle than 80-100% at x°c and so on
@@sandysan4191 I did a little research, when they say 500 or 1000 cycles it means from 0%-100% or vice-versa. Since people rarely charge their phone from 0% (and most phones tell you it's at 0% when it's really around 5%) it actually take several charges before it's consider 1 cycle.
It's an average, basically a lot of batteries fail early on, and it drives the average way down. If it has already survived 200 cycles, it will probably survive hundreds more
Big plus for the TOOL in the Spotify App :)
The text problem. Solution: use mono space fonts
Rounded corners in AR also works due to how peripheral vision works. Rounded corners disappear into the background when you look past them with peripheral vision. Sharp window corners does the opposite - loudly nagging away at your peripheral vision while you look at something else past it.
The fact that the QWERTY layout was designed to avoid typewriter jamming is not 100% accurate.
Here is a nice video that also quickly shows QWERTY layout evolution:
ruclips.net/video/188fipF-i5I/видео.html
Also, there was indeed alphabetic order, that's why we have DFGHJKL following each other, just with E and I moved to the upper row in order for salesmen to be able to type TYPEWRITER more conveniently
Finally someone said it! I saw this video too a while ago and now I get really annoyed whenever people incorrectly share their "facts" about keyboard layouts. Your comment should be pinned.
This video is so underrated. I watched every minute with much pleasure and gathering cool information. I’m going to watch other video of yours because if they’re all like this you’re definitely growing as a RUclipsr
2:54 Tool refrence
The Scroll Lock key does have a use in most spreadsheet programs. Turn Scroll Lock _off_ and your cursor keys will move your cell selection. Turn Scroll Lock _on_ and your cursor keys will move the sheet, but the currently selected cell will stay the same. Much like when you use the scroll bars with the mouse.
7:14 STOP UR LYING, MY LIFE S A LIE
3:52 seems like the draw with shuffle isn't "randomness" as much as it is "variety" in that case
8:20 They failed, it only worked for the Subscribe button. Do better, RUclips!
8:29 This time neither lit up at all...
I’ve seen it on some videos where the like button would light up I’ve seen it first on a short
@@JWSDeCrypt A light button?
7:15 You actually saved me by teaching me this now. I've never knew this method of zooming in and out actually existed in Google Maps, this is going to prevent so many future headaches!!
11:02 i got rickrolled
We all got rickrolled XD
Imagine the Nickelodeon splat being “Kiki”
My like and sub didn’t light up but I have seen it before
Probably they are still AB testing this in some countries, I and others that I know have been seeing this pretty consistently
The Google Maps zoom feature.... i actually did the blinking suprise face before you played the meme! 😂
I don't wanna listen to it even once
The sequence where you can see Tool Lateralus was my highlight in this Video
I find macOS font rendering absolutely horrible.
I can’t live without it. 😊
That double tap and drag gesture works on almost everything. Like gallery, reddit, Twitter, whatsapp
The shuffle is true , I always listen on pc nowdays so it's easier.
Rejecting convinience for sake of control
People like me will suffer and return back when needed but same for movies and games and other stuff. Rejecting ease of use creates more control and optimization. Nobody wants you to buy movies or games in CD , and worse nowday you only get the download authorization , not the CD ! or online activation..
Lots of nice videos from you btw, your exactly the channel I wanna watch because i'm also obscess over design and human psych behind those design. It's the little things.. I have been addicted to social media and even then I knew what was the reason. same with gacha games , I literally knew those games had casino kind of stuff .
These videos didn't 360 my life but lots of helpful stuff. I'm always Grey when it comes to how good I handle things.
I can be a addict or basically the wrong user of something and yet learn or soon grow out of it.
Addiction is hard to quit but I'm able to quit quickly but re-addict if I get bored again. Boredom however is needed for creativity.
And I know my comment isn't consistent. That's what I am . My brain overthinking and my above comment is mix of lots of things , probably some out of topic with the video. That itself is a psychology :))
I was aware of some stuff but this stuff is mindblowing. Thanks for the video
Honestly the mac having blurrier text than a windows is kinda funny to me, i dont like it, i prefer the crisp words on windows
I've learned the double tap zoom just a few weeks ago... I was extremely flabbergasted, and everyone I asked about this, never knew that this was a thing either 😂
The "like and subscribe" buttons sections is the most replayed. Genius feature of your video.
6:29 i love how he’s made his background blue for this video 😭🤣
Two videos into your channel and learned two new things, libby and the thumb zoom on Google maps. Why thank you sir.
Omg i came to get informed, but i acquired is to get to know a man who has no concerns in showing that he listened to Lateralus in his RUclips video. Keep Spiraling out, my friend
9:56 - Having learned zsh/bash (which share 99.9% feature-wise, and are the default command line shells on MacOS and Linux respectively), I think that some use cases are inherently served better through the command line.
Anything involving tons of obnoxious steps, repetition, large amounts of data, or configuring a metric ton of options tends to lend itself to a command line interface.
I would explain, but honestly it's a hard sell to learn time wise because it's not always obvious how it can be helpful, despite it being one of my best skills for boosting my productivity on a computer personally.
We lost something when most apps abandoned the command line!
Your videos are always extremely interesting and edited well.
i did not plan to watch this entire vid, but the thumbnail made me curious. well done mate, i really am stunned by this info. i don't normally sub to tech channels, but ya got me..