This stackexchange answer I sought out after seeing the video from Jeff Geerling[0] provided the best explanations I had seen.
Also a helpful recommendation to use https://www.rpilocator.com/ to find any supply when it becomes available.
TL;DR/TL;DW
While what everyone surely has guessed to be the case is true (demand is so high they would have increased the production rate to meet that demand if not for supply chain shortages), commercial customers that have priority are sucking up most of the supply so very few are left for the hobbyist market. Interestingly, some RPi producers seem to be skimming some of their own production to scalp on the hobbyist market for higher prices.
Just learned about this. Kind of cool that other terminals are adopting these protocols, I especially appreciate the idea in the nnn file manager. Much better than sixel graphics, which has wider support but is very limited and dated.
Wish I could find a more neutral source, but this is what is available. I was surprised to see this, I had thought that shadowbans on twitter were like those on reddit, so only used for non-human bots.
It now seems populated with a combined 3 results between the two tabs linked. If it is a technical malfunction rather than a shadow ban, what do you suspect is happening?
EDIT: Adding archive links for proof, looks like 4 results combined:
The margins for safety with space launches are always very slim, but I would hope science and practicality win over top-down pressure if that's present for the human mission.
>What we learned was that several popular Android health apps including Drugs.com Medication Guide, WebMD: Symptom Checker and Period Calendar Period Tracker gave advertisers the information they’d need to market to people or groups of consumers based on their health concerns.
>The Drugs.com Android app, for example, sent data to more than 100 outside entities including advertising companies, DuckDuckGo said. Terms inside those data transfers included “herpes,” “HIV,” “adderall” (a drug to treat attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder), “diabetes” and “pregnancy.” These keywords came alongside device identifiers, which raise questions about privacy and targeting.
>Drugs.com said it’s not transmitting any data that counts as “sensitive personal information” and that its ads are relevant to the page content, not to the individual viewing that page. When The Post pointed out that in one case Drugs.com appeared to send an outside company the user’s first and last name — a false name DuckDuckGo used for its testing — it said that it never intended for users to input their names into the “profile name” field and that it will stop transmitting the contents of that field.
This project seems like a really big deal as it makes Rust truly a bootstrapped language, since the other backends mrustc and LLVM are both written in C++. With all the interest in Rust on HN I was surprised it hadn't been submitted before.