Nerfs and Shortage Phase helping get fights?

Welcome to capitalism.
Don’t forget to mention that ‘trickle down’ rubbish…

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In my opinion the resistance nerfs will make cheap PVP fits much more prevalent - which actually might be a good thing in one sense, as it may encourage more hi-sec players to risk FW and lo-sec PVP. However, PVE will lose out big time. Unless CCP have plans to restore the previous nerfs to the Gila, for instance, I can see this beautiful ship - that is already pretty much confined to PVE - disappearing from the game altogether…which would be a real shame.

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:grinning: I know how this works. I also know what you were saying and trying to do here.

Even if I were to direct the cone of such sieve to the window, the G4 antenna would still face the opposite site of the building and the window faces downhill.
Though I could make do without the sieve and the spotty reception, another issue I am facing is that in order to keep EVE Online running for hours, I also have to charge the battery constantly.
That lithium-ion battery only allows so many charges and using the phone while charging it, will kill the battery in a very short time.
What most people don’t know is when you charge the phone as advertised and use it at the same time, you basically short-circuit the battery and kill it like that unlucky guy, venturing into lowsec for the first time and jumping into an insta-lock gate-camp.
The battery will do fine for a short while but there are the death-crystals that start to build and grow, which gradually will kill the battery long before you reach the maximum amount of charge cycles.
By the way, every time you plug the cable in, you initiate a charge cycle, whether that charge cycle lasts 1 second or 1 hour, it always counts as one full charge cycle and also degrades the battery.

Anyhow thanks for trying to help here!

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:slight_smile:

Hm. I had months of keeping my phone hooked while using.
Are you sure that’s a general thing?

Anyhow, thanks for letting me know! My A3 is rooted, underclocked, blue-filtered and everything that takes unnecessary power is disabled by default. After 4 years it still works practically like fresh.

Death Crystals. Interesting.

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You can look at those 2 videos and make your own judgement, don’t take my word for it because I am not a chemist:

By the way, in the Android™ settings menu there is a sub-settings menu called ‘about the phone’, at least since Android™ 6.0.
In this settings menu you can find ‘software information’ or similar in a row, depending on how you display the information on the screen.
Once you can see the ‘software information’ sub-menu, tab on the screen on the row or rectangle with the ‘software information’ title 7 times and you get a message that the ‘developer mode’ will be activated with the next tab.
The ‘developer mode’ allows you to make all the settings, USB-debugging and settings you otherwise don’t have access to.
‘Rooting the phone’ is only for people who really do not like security or find data security totally unnecessary or have never heard of it.

The (free!!!) Android™ developer suit also allows some monitoring on and of the device and make settings you otherwise cannot make to the phone possible.

My last comment about smart phones, my Nokia Xpress Music 5800 now has the second battery after 8 years of using the phone.
Nokia made a new edition of the Xpress Music battery with +100mAh of charge and a new safety guard. My first Xpress Music battery suffered from obesity in the end of its life after only 8 years.
My Android™ device will become 6 years of age this year in May and according to that benchmark the battery health is still “good”.
The benchmark ‘3D Mark’ for Android claimed last year that the device now supports Vulkan™ and outperformed 85% of the other devices on the market at the time.

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I’m not sure if I should find this either insulting, or ignorant. :slight_smile:

It is an observation I made, nothing more. The developer mode should give you all the access and control of your device.

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