I wonder if he wrote some of the CUDA code or anything like that.
I wonder if he wrote some of the CUDA code or anything like that.
should I completely jumpship to linux when windows 10 ends support
Nah, there’s no need to wait.
Most used: k9 mail, Firefox, Voyager. Favorite: termux is awesome but I don’t use it much.
Added: Trail Sense is another great app that I don’t use all that much at the moment.
Https://lichess.org/training lets me pretend I’m improving my mind by playing.
If porn was just created on demand instead of filling millions of hdd’s, would anyone notice or care? Finally a use for generative AI.
One MILLLLLION dollars.
I didn’t read or see it, but shortly before one of the Harry Potter books (maybe the 5th) was officially released, someone “leaked a pirated copy” online. Lots of people downloaded it and liked it and weren’t suspicious about it. It advanced the plot in a convincing way, and so on. But it was completely fake, written from scratch by a fan of the series. Ha.
Lichess.org was good enough for Gramps and it’s good enough for me.
It took me some moments to figure out that this is an Android launcher. Nice. I guess it will be on droid at some point.
I understand the idea but it has been around for decades with no actual deployments so far, so I’ll believe it when I see it.
True. I guess utilities do the same thing but they eventually get ratepayer bailouts. Maybe Google will realize that early enough to structure the deals the same way.
Things just weren’t like that then. Otherwise all PC peripherals would be locked down too, so no device drivers. That was already a problem with cheap windows crap. But the better stuff was documented.
Maybe there would be no Linux but that isn’t as bad as it sounds, since BSD Unix was being pried loose at the time, plus there were other kernels that had potential. And the consumer PCs we use now weren’t really foreseen. We expected to run on workstation class hardware that was more serious (though more expensive) than PCs were at the time. They would have stayed less locked down.
Asded: PCs were an interesting target because there was a de facto open hardware standard, making the “PC compatible” industry possible. So again, without that, we would have used different hardware.
This has been all over the news but I wonder what they really expect. I’ve never heard of a nuke project anywhere that didn’t go years behind schedule and billions over budget. Why do they think it will be different this time?
Thinkpad Yoga?
Lame. 45 days? 10 days for DCV? How common are exploits involving old certificates anyway? And automated cert management is just another exploit target. Do they seriously think an attacker who pwns a server can’t keep the automatic renewals running?
I don’t get all wrapped up in imagining sharing the experience or anything like that, but it’s always nice to get a factual update about the other person. And if they have something interesting to say about whatever it is, that’s good too.
Someone whose interests align with yours and who is more active in the organization so they follow the issues more. E.g. a board member or staff member, etc. It depends on the org too, of course.
Usually you just appoint a proxy to represent your interests in a given organization, I thought.
Get a USB hub (7 port is common), plug the USB drives in, then run a script that copies the iso to one drive after another. USB itself sucks enough that trying to do them in parallel is likely asking for trouble.
I think you don’t want the spaces around the= sign. Preferred over alias is function llaa { … }. Alias is for backwards compatibility.