Message from @Geartooth
Discord ID: 470453773165133825
@Deleted User I'd rather try my luck on Alibaba and try to play some vendors against each other. At 200bucks they're definitely open to haggle.
are there any chink egpu enclosures that wont explode?
Stop memeing
ok
Fuckkkkkkk
Mi Mix 3 when
its almost the perfect phone
only thing that would make it better is a MicroLED screen, which isnt on any phone yet
🤔
I too would like unobtainium tech
>just a stick that emits light
Sure comes in handy for checking if I missed a spot when painting. Anything new and exciting coming out in the world of chink lighting soon?
Nothing mush other than maybe some nifty chink reddots that have some insane battery lofe by stealing Aimpoints new designs
But thats a couple years away
More tests with Gcam and Stock on the A1
We saw that chink!
whos pp do i have to suck to get gcam
But no really GCam works wonders
Am I retarded for preferring the stock in many shots
>Australian goods and services tax (GST) 10% will apply to each order valued at A$1,000 or less, and AliExpress is required by law to collect such GST and remit to Australian Taxation Office
How the fuck is it that Aus can enforce taxes on China, or the EU can enforce privacy legislation on US companies? Did I miss a big thing?
Other countries charge it when you pick it up at passport office
@timsandtoms easy. Collect and pay tax to us or we will prevent trade with you.
Same way EU can enforce privacy regulations (and regulations in general) on everyone else
No real "hard" power, but plenty of "soft" power in terms of trade
So enforcing in terms of courts etc. would be quite difficult, but not impossible.
Whereas they could more easily say "nobody in Australia may shop on AliExpress until they agree to collect and pay tax"
On a related note, voluntarily adopting a jurisdiction's standards can increase trade with that jurisdiction.
So if China wants max trade with Australia, it will voluntarily adopt even if they are completely unthreatened
I mean, that makes sense on a more global scale, but if I, living in the US, start up a website that tracks a bunch of data that's totally legal to track, and some of its on EU users, what's the recourse for them? Do they just bitch and moan to the US government to try to get me on some other charge, and in the meanwhile I just avoid ever visiting the EU, or is there actually a process in place?
The EU people would complain to their local privacy regulator
Seems like a prisoner's dilemma type thing, where sure, it makes sense if EVERYONE is on board, but it's more profitable to be the odd one out.
But yeah they'd be pretty toothless
@porco didn't want to get the new version with mopping included? with your wooden floor that for sure would have worked nicely
I thought that would damage it too much
you've been at my place, did you notice the damages in the floor?
the mop would damage itself a lot I believe, so I thought it's not worth it
well yeah you got a point