Between season 18 and 19 was when the movie came out it IMDb's dates are correct.
I think they're just saying that if you're a multi billionaire and get a 50% net worth fine, you're still a billionaire once it's done.
So this makes Amazon, Microsoft and Google jumping on board the nuclear energy train. Meta would have to be the next domino surely?
I can see where you got watch from looking at the picture as a thumbnail rather than a full image!
Probably had leftover screens after they stopped making the 3DS and wanted to use them for something.
Bit of grocery shopping, some delicious but probably bad for me food and if I can wrangle it some FFXIV with my son and brother in law (BIL is interstate so need to make sure they're available).
An Apple TV actually fits this use case pretty well. Being Apple most providers will have native apps available for the device (they definitely have Netflix, Prime Video and Disney+), it comes with a remote but supports using other infrared remotes (you can train it to recognise specific buttons so doesn't matter what remote you use), and you can also control it from your phone (it works natively for iOS but there are Android apps that can do it too).
For casting, if you use Apple devices it's easy with AirPlay. If you use Android devices there are apps you can get that support Chromecast, however haven't ever used them personally so can't comment on their effectiveness.
And to date Apple haven't put ads into the tvOS interface. It's basically a grid of apps and you just open the one you want to watch. It's been our primary TV device for years now, and is simple enough to use that even my 60 something tech adverse mum likes using it.
That's basically what I got out of it as well. They're not trying to give the police access to our devices, they're trying to get the police to become users of Apple tech themselves.
For most of my internal services that are sitting behind Traefik I use step-ca which basically gives you a Let's Encrypt style certificate while working over the local network. The root CA has a long expiry (so might not be what you want if your goal Is a short lived root CA) but the actual certificates for each service are short lived (a touch over 24 hours from memory?)
Capitalism?
I saw a similar comment in the last week or so (might have been on TikTok?) but it was specifically Japanese court that they'd said they'd never lost in. I don't know if it's accurate though, took it at face value and didn't really think much about it.
But once it's recompiled it runs so smooth.