Definitely will take time, though let’s not discount the fact that Linux came about before the internet was the internet. I don’t know if it will take 30 years, but certainly ten years or more doesn’t seem unreasonable.
Definitely will take time, though let’s not discount the fact that Linux came about before the internet was the internet. I don’t know if it will take 30 years, but certainly ten years or more doesn’t seem unreasonable.
Check your airflow. It could be that heat is building somewhere and being recycled into the intake.
Thermal Grizzly also makes a high performance pad (i.e. nothing wrong with using a properly-rated pad), so if you think yours is good, it’s probably airflow related.
RedoxOS is trying to do that with Rust
Chinese state-sponsored spies have been spotted inside a global engineering firm’s network, having gained initial entry using an admin portal’s default credentials on an IBM AIX server.
In an exclusive interview with The Register, Binary Defense’s Director of Security Research John Dwyer said the cyber snoops first compromised one of the victim’s three unmanaged AIX servers in March, and remained inside the US-headquartered manufacturer’s IT environment for four months while poking around for more boxes to commandeer.
Emphasis mine.
“Hmm, yes. Let’s connect this server to our trusted network and never touch it again.” FFS.
Honestly, this is the question people should be asking in response. I totally get the gut reaction against censorship, but I don’t think anyone would agree that Facebook, Xitter, etm. are innocent, neutral parties in all of this.
Part of the issue (as the article points out) is that those companies have been allowed to essentially craft people’s internal narrative, often amplifying our worst impulses and inclinations—all in service of making the black line go up for investors.
So is banning social media for teens the correct path forward? Maybe in the short term, but until we direct the governance to the companies creating the problems in the first place, we’re almost certainly going to have this conversation again in the future.
And D&D
It’s still an ad, intentional or not, mainly because of the unrestrained, almost hyperbolic positivity. It sounds almost exactly like a pitch to investors, assuring them that they can invest in this totally-not-a-fad tech scheme. Also, it’s a wall of text…
Which is exactly what I’d expect from a LLM that doesn’t actually comprehend what it’s writing but instead plagiarizes and amalgamates businesses pitches and internet fanboy screed.
It’s not a copyright suit, it’s a patent suit. So it’s indeed just like the Apple suit, though what patents were infringed upon is still unknown as of now.
Eat shit, Nintendo. I hope you lose and experience the Streisand effect.
I don’t have an interest in the underlying project, but the default setup for Openbox on Archcraft looks really nice.
I would actually recommend Spiral Linux if somebody new wanted to go with Debian. It’s the Debian analog to Endeavor.
I do QA Automation for a large software company. We still have manual QA testing, because it’s costly and sometimes impossible to automate everything.
Also, there is no scenario where you can automate everything until you can automate social engineering. It’s why scammers don’t bother trying to hack your bank but instead try to get you to buy $2000 in Applebee’s gift cards to settle “an IRS debt that you need to fix RIGHT NOW!”
No, I just thought they were vaguely similar enough words to make a dumb internet joke.
Oh, the artificial humanity!
This. I had a similar thing happen to a laptop, and it was indeed the CMOS battery.
This is a very good point, and it’s one of the reasons I don’t use my old laptop as an always-on server.
There’s a subset of the Linux/FOSS/etc. community who are Conservative, misogynistic, racist, and/or otherwise general bigots. Compare the Ventoy-bros against the Elon-bros, and you’ll see a similar pattern of behavior.
I don’t personally understand it, since development is still sometimes seen as “work for weirdo nerds,” so you’d think they would understand what it feels like to be rejected or bullied, but here we are. They manage to stay under the radar, because there’s usually no reason to discuss politics or philosophy when you’re debugging code.
That story was a journey.
I had heard that. Maybe I’ll get my hands on one someday. I hear Commodore makes one.
(I do wonder now if whatever variable is being used to denote time is signed or unsigned, because that would make a big difference, too.)
Especially those by CS Lewis and JRR Tolkein.