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> Video unavailable > The uploader has not made this video available in your country

I'd love to watch this but unfortunately. My country being AU.


This YouTube video is just a trailer for the documentary, it does look amazing. It looks like the entire documentary is available on some free streaming sites, here's one: https://play.xumo.com/free-movies/it-s-quieter-in-the-twilig...

If that doesn't work, try using a VPN set to the US as country.


I think I watched it on Amazon Prime in the USA. I don't know if Oz has Prime or what rights they have.

I checked the usual sites on the high seas and it is available for instant download there too :)



Why do some uploaders make it unavailable in certain countries?

licensing probably

But for an advert?

You can rent videos from YouTube, wouldn't you just make the video available but charge for it?


> A 19k lines-of-code Pull Request was opened in January, 2026.

Such a PR should be rejected simply because of the shear size of it, regardless of AI use. Seriously, who submits a 19k line PR? Just make many small ones.


The PR touched a lot of internals, including module code and mirrors the fs APIs. So, yes it was big, but the commit history was largely clean and followed a development story, and it was tested. The code quality was decent too. I didn't review all of it because I don't have a personal stake in this though.

I suggest EVERYONE in this thread go read the the GitHub PR in question. There's some good arguments for and against AI, and what it means for FOSS... But good lord you will have to sift through the virtue signalling bullshit and have patience for the constant moving of goalposts


How would you go about breaking up this particular set of functionality into smaller PRs, exactly? It's meant to introduce a virtualized file system... the size is dictated by the feature itself.

Also, no mention at all regarding the test coverage, or impact if any on existing code paths specifically.


There's multiple features, not just VFS.

So, like a 17.5k line change just for VFS? That'd be so much smaller and easier to reason with.

Unfortunately you're flawed to think that rational and evidence based thinking plays a role in the final decision making.

I did the same in 2023. I got the Asus Q470:

https://www.asus.com/motherboards-components/motherboards/cs...

I added a Intel Core i7 10700K (with a nice low-profile Noctua cooler/fan) with 32GB of memory and a 512GB SSD and I'm using onboard graphics which is just fine for a daily driver "office" type machine running Linux. Very happy with it.


If I am not mistaken, another part of the equation is that it physically takes years to build a single missile (hence the cost).


What? You don't just prompt your kitchen?


sudo make me a sandwich


It's easier to defer principled decision making to the future while you can rake in the cash in the meantime.


Yeah i think this is pretty much it tbh


Isn't charity just a business model these days? The first time I came across was about 10 or so years ago where, I think it was a 60 minutes did a report on Movember, how they have some scheme/scam where the guys who started/own the "charity" also have another company that owns the Movember brand and the charity then has to licence the brand from that company. Meaning that for every dollar donated a good portion (can't remember the exact figure) then goes straight into their pockets as license fees.


This was the trick with the Aboriginal Flag in Australia but that guy beat the odds by getting it into government. I have some suspicion that the various derivative rainbow flags are a similar structure.


> Yakult (ヤクルト, Yakuruto) is a Japanese sweetened probiotic milk beverage fermented with the bacteria strain Lacticaseibacillus casei Shirota. It is sold by Yakult Honsha based in Tokyo.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yakult


You should have also quoted the next sentence: The name "Yakult" was coined from jahurto, an Esperanto word meaning "yogurt".


> By law, each household in the UK - with some exceptions - has to pay if they:

> watch or record programmes as they're being shown live on any TV channel

> The rules apply to any device on which a programme is viewed, including a TV, desktop or laptop computer, mobile phone, tablet, games console or set-top box.

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cz9k27yy839o


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