

Seller does not have to raise the prices.
Importer (US company) pays the additional import tax (tariff) and then covers that by rising consumer prices.


Seller does not have to raise the prices.
Importer (US company) pays the additional import tax (tariff) and then covers that by rising consumer prices.
Wrote excels that controlled building automation and heat exchanger settings, collected water and electricity meter data automatically and created bills ready to print and mail to tenants.
That was about quarter century ago.


Not that HP isn’t aware or not ticked off about this, mind. Recently they threatened to brick HP printers that use third-party cartridges if detected
Try that in EU.
I dare you. I double dare you.
<Jules Winnfield>What does ECCN look like?</Jules Winnfield>


Yes and no. That model still gets updates. One I have has no active support licence, so it has to be updated manually.


No. It’s proprietary custom SoC that runs heavily modified unix on ARM.
But software is solid and patches come out lightning fast.


Same idea here. Fortigate 30f (since I can dl updates manually), Fortiswitch 124e (same) and 2 FortiAP 421E’s (ditto). All but ap’s I could grab from employers “ditch bin”.


If couple reports are true, it is already breached and can be mined for info.
Edit:
https://www.wired.com/story/total-recall-windows-recall-ai/


Sounds like 'murrica.
Obligatory “Way ahead of you” post.


Meanwhile, one level up:
“Hey, look! Our planetary simulation has developed it’s own planetary simulation.”
“Cool! Lets set up a pool how many recursive simulations there will be in 100 years.”
😉
They are easily identifiable by red baseball caps.