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There's a huge difference between checking packages addressed to individuals vs checking bulk goods.

Cool, how many containers with drugs pass checks in Antwerp, Rotterdam and Hamburg?

Because groceries are the same high margin items, that are hidden in sophisticated ways?

> are hidden in sophisticated ways?

Yes, they are in fact hidden even better. How do you see that bananas contain banned pesticides or that meat contains banned antibiotics?


You take a sample of a charge and test it.

If it contains forbidden substances you fine the importer.

Most grocery chains in Germany with the exception of Edeka (I guess it's similar in other countries) apply stricter standards than the legal limit anyway with their suppliers, and ensure compliance by testing on their own


How is Edeka different? Honest question.

Small nitpick: you're writing OpenStreetMaps instead of OpenStreetMap (no trailing s) everywhere.


Thanks, pushed a fix for the home page!


Because then there's no VC money to be made. It needs at least robots. And I bet they were better off, if those robots were "smart" and AI-powered!


"gnome-remote-desktop" does exactly that - providing (amongst other capabilities) a way to handle remote logins: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-remote-desktop


Remote assistance, NOT remote logins. It can be used as support when someone is already went to that computer, authenticated and has a full gnome session opened.

So you literally CANNOT log in remotely :) If you are lucky, you can assist remotely to a session someone opened locally on that machine.

And it's like that on any other WM. KDE also has a deceiving option in settings that suggests full remote desktop, while it doesn't allow that.


Please just click in the link, read the README! It offers: - remote assistance - headless multi user remote login - headless (single user)


I don't want to argue on semantics. Currently you can't start a graphical session completely remotely using any protocol (RDP, VNC, no machine, whatever).


I don't use GNOME, or GDM, or RDP, but isn't https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-remote-desktop#headless... describing that?

> GNOME Remote Desktop supports integrating with the GNOME Display Manager (GDM) to achieve remote login functionality. This feature is only available via the RDP protocol. It works by the remote user first authenticating via a system wide password, which gives access to the graphical login screen, where they can login using their user specific credentials.

And then it seems to describe a pure-cli config process that you could set up once over SSH and then be able to RDP to the box thereafter.

Actually for that matter, the next section - https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-remote-desktop#headless... - appears to describe doing a single-user version of the same, explicitly running headless.


Have you actually tried setting it up on Wayland yourself?

Please do.

I've seen too many threads like this based on a hunch and docs, while it just doesn't work.

I'll be more than happy to be proven wrong.


I've used it. It works fine. You connect with RDP, get a gdm login screen, and can log in.


Thank you, I will definitely test it soon.


> Have you actually tried setting it up on Wayland yourself?

I use it very regularly. Particularly the headless part (where nobody is logged in physically, just a remote session).


It's not explicit from the link, but does it allow the headless login to be resumed from console and vice versa?

I tried some solutions in the past but they did not support that, which is a deal breaker.


There are no headless sessions on Wayland. At all.

You want proper headless session, set up X11 distro and use xrdp - it's really easy. But on wayland "remote support" to something that is already displayed on screen is all you can get now.


What I want is to be able to start a session remotely after a reboot, and continue that same session when I get back home. And conversely start a session while at my desk at home and resume that same session remotely. Without any weird limitations.

In other words, how RDP works on Windows.

So you're saying that is still not possible I take it.


The tax-credit (there are no other "tricks") just shortens the pay-off time of 3-5 years by 19%, that's all!


The great thing about BeaconDB: the API-compatibility to MozillaLocationService. So apps just need to update their endpoint to continue working.


A standalone library would have to work with all the existing system facilities (e.g. NSS on Linux systems) to be not restricted to just resolv.conf entries, but to allow for all the various other methods of resolving names.


libcurl's c-ares support would fit the bill?


Cookie-banners were never mandated. It's just a fucking stupid way by the website operators, trying to circumvent data privacy regulation.

And when it comes to USB-C. Sure, it's far from perfect, but it's a great foundation to built upon and improve.


That's the point, the regulation effectively locks in USB-C as it is.


They were mandated by the EU. You don't get to pass crap laws of the form "show a banner or do {vague/impossible/unacceptable thing}" and then complain when 100% of people show a banner. That kind of inane immaturity is why the EU is so far behind and falling further.


Please don't fulminate on HN. You may not owe cookie banners better, but we're trying for a better style of conversation here. Please make an effort to observe the guidelines, which seek to make HN a place for curious conversation, not rage.

https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html


The Germany municipality of Tübingen implemented a "Verpackungssteuer" (tax on single-use packaging, utensils). It was fought by the local McDonald's franchisee up to the highest relevant court (Bundesverwaltungsgericht) and finally approved.

Dozens of other German municipalities were just waiting for the final decision to implement their own local tax.


BSH Group which builds household appliances for Bosch Home is not related to Bosch eBike Systems in any way.

They're geographically and organisation-wise so far from each other, they're basically two different companies.


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