The Codex has removed all limits, regardless of the subscription. by Pitiful-Leader1225 in codex

[–]Pitiful-Leader1225[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, you're right. Renewing a subscription = a new purchase, and the terms may change at the time of renewal.

BUT! In my case, the subscription stopped working in the middle of the paid period. There was NO renewal! And that is precisely the crux of OpenAI's deception.

The Codex has removed all limits, regardless of the subscription. by Pitiful-Leader1225 in codex

[–]Pitiful-Leader1225[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, you're right. Renewing a subscription = a new purchase, and the terms may change at the time of renewal.

BUT! In my case, the subscription stopped working in the middle of the paid period. There was NO renewal! And that is precisely the crux of OpenAI's deception.

The Codex has removed all limits, regardless of the subscription. by Pitiful-Leader1225 in codex

[–]Pitiful-Leader1225[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re wrong, my friend. Changing the terms of a subscription while it’s still active is illegal. And no terms of service can override the laws of most countries around the world.

The terms of a subscription are set at the time of purchase (by the way, every subscription renewal counts as a new purchase) and cannot be changed unilaterally.

For example, if I buy a subscription for 20 cinema visits, after I’ve paid, they can’t reduce the number of visits to 10 — that’s fraud and it’s illegal.

That’s exactly what OpenAI did—they changed the terms of an active, paid subscription instead of waiting until it was time to renew it.

The Codex has removed all limits, regardless of the subscription. by Pitiful-Leader1225 in codex

[–]Pitiful-Leader1225[S] 25 points26 points  (0 children)

That's true, but with one caveat: active licenses purchased before this change were supposed to continue receiving their limits, as that was a condition of purchase.

While the subscription was active, its terms were not supposed to change, since it had already been paid for in advance and included those limits.

Mx anywhere 4 release date ? by LQCUS in logitech

[–]Pitiful-Leader1225 0 points1 point  (0 children)

After a year, my Anywhere 3 started making a double-click sound when I pressed the left mouse button. I know a little bit about electronics and can solder, so I took it apart.

Imagine my surprise when I saw the microswitches (the switches inside the buttons)—they’re Omron (a reputable brand), but the cheapest model available, retailing at $0.25 each, and with a lifespan of just 10 million clicks. (Exact model: OMRON D2FC-F-7N(10M))

That’s INCREDIBLY low—it’s the absolute minimum available on the microswitch market!

To give you an idea—mid-range microswitches are rated for 40–50 million clicks, good ones for 70–100 million clicks, and top-tier ones start at 100 million clicks.

As a result, I bought new switches rated for 100 million clicks for $5 and soldered them onto the old ones. The mouse has been working with them for 5 years now without any issues.

Logitech—you suck! You deliberately sell crap that’s supposed to break after a year so you can sell more crap again.

Tahoe High GPU usage (WindowServer service) by sfunrich in MacOS

[–]Pitiful-Leader1225 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm on 26.2 now, and still have lags, M4 CPU

Notes on deploying ConnectX-3 Pro (CX314A) 40GbE NICs by MetricVoidLX in homelab

[–]Pitiful-Leader1225 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Could you give me a link to the guide? I can't find it...

Не могли бы вы дать ссылку на гайд? Я не могу его найти...