Over 15% marketshare in India
Over 15% marketshare in India
~35 million concurrent active users.
Dunno. I don't live there.
Home assistant is the only/best option
What the user was doing is that they don't trust that the system truly deleted the account, and they worry it was just deactivated (while claiming it was "deleted"). So they tried to do a password recovery which often reactivates a falsely "deleted" account.
I've done this before and had to message the company and have them confirm the account is entirely deleted.
Thank goodness they cleared out all that snow and ice so that we can finally see the pretty mountains.
JSON data within a database is perfectly fine and has completely justified use cases. JSON is just a way to structure data. If it's bespoke data or something that doesn't need to be structured in a table, a JSON string can keep all that organized.
We use it for intake questionnaire data. It's something that needs to be on file for record purposes, but it doesn't need to be queried aside from simply being loaded with the rest of the record.
Edit: and just to add, even MS SQL/Azure SQL has the ability to both query and even index within a JSON object. Of course Postgres' JSONB data type is far better suited for that.
Why should Amazon be liable for stuff sold by third parties?
Even when proven dangerous products are reported to Amazon they continue to sell it.
Louis Rossman talks about it a lot.
I have it on good authority that pedos and criminals drive cars and eat food too! We should do something to those facilitating that.
Last I'd heard other options either didn't have infrastructure to charge vehicles on long trips
Literally isn't an issue going forward. Other EVs can use Tesla chargers.
I have my money on Tesla being the first cloud-connected car (that phrase shouldn't exist) to be hacked and push a malicious firmware that will cause all cars to simultaneously activate self driving and to pull a hard left at a specific time (time bomb).
That would break 90+% of installations then.
But it could also be for legal reasons, like websites where you can post stuff for everybody to see, in case you post something highly illegal and the authorities need to find you. Another example is where a webshop is required to keep a copy of your data for their bookkeeping.
None of these require your account to "exist". There could simply be an acknowledgement stating those reasons with "after X days the data will be deleted, and xyz will be archived for legal reasons".
Mostly it's 30-90 days where they keep your data, just in case somebody else decided to delete your account or you were drunk or something
This is the only valid reason. But even then this could be stated so that the user is fully aware. Then an email one week and another one day before deletion as a reminder, and a final confirmation after the fact. I've used services before that do this. It's done well and appreciated.
This pseudo-deletion shadow account stuff is annoying.
They're already talking about breaking up Google/Alphabet
No, because it isn't 2015 anymore.
What's wrong with his wrist?
NASA pays SpaceX for launch services.
https://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-hy-musk-subsidies-20150531-story.html
I think you're confusing NASA as a client of SpaceX with direct government subsidies and contacts. SpaceX has received billions and billions of dollars via contracts since 2015 (date of the article I linked). They've used that government money for their R&D to advance their tech and get to where they are today.
even if you have two drives, you still have only one bootloader, not?
The idea is to have completely separate boot and OS drives. You select which one you want to boot through the BIOS boot selection (ie. pressing F10 or F11 at the BIOS screen).
This functionally makes each OS "unaware" of the other one.
Couldn't even use a 16 Pro?
/s
Fun fact: the nubs on the tail club are called osteoderms and the tail spikes on a stegosaurus is called a thagomizer.
They take getting caught seriously, not the stuff they get caught at.
This is it exactly. They (gov) literally don't care if anyone gets hurt, they just care what the world's perception of them is.
I think the best bet is an entirely new system from the ground up that has an open architecture that every company can equally implement that from the ground up and is as simple as possible.
This keeps getting said by people who don't understand operating systems. Even if you build something from the ground up, you still end up with an operating system very much like Linux and Windows. The choices that were made for each OS were not random. The principles of I/O, user input, graphics display, filesystems, etc, are more or less universal concepts across all OSes.
What you will accomplish is making an OS that no one will use. Linux, Windows, and macOS already fill every market that can be filled. Microsoft tried to become a third player in the mobile market and their product died pretty quickly.
Google has been trying to build Fuschia into a new OS and they've asked back their ambitions (from what I recall reading).
Nothing official. Mostly speculation, but not illogical idle ones.
I don't like btrfs, cause you still sometimes read about people loosing their data.
That was only on RAID setups. So if you have only a singular disk, as opposed to an array, you're fine. And that issue has been fixed for a while now anyways.
I've been running btrfs on my laptop's root partition for well over a year now and it's fine.
No digital game store is worth your loyalty.
When that store is run by a company that contributes massively to open source and works harder and puts more money into enabling alternate platforms for gaming than all other companies combined; ya, they have my loyalty.
I remember cities moving onto open source and than thanks for lobbyists moving back to proprietary software again.
What you remember is the news cycle covering the City of Munich switching from Windows to Linux, then another news cycle about how they're moving back to Windows.
What didn't get much coverage though, is that Microsoft did a (suspected under-table) deal with the outgoing government to switch back to Windows if Microsoft built an office in Munich.
What then happened is the new government came in, looked at the situation, and cancelled it (although MS may have built that office always). Right now Munich is still using Linux and still actively rolling it out.
I would love to see reasonable competition to steam which would give consumers and developers better options
No one's going to compete with and outdo Steam with Linux support.
Using Relational DBs where the data model is better suited to other sorts of DBs.
This is true if most or all of your data is such. But when you have only a few bits of data here and there, it's still better to use the RDB.
For example, in a surveillance system (think Blue Iris, Zone Minder, or Shinobi) you want to use an RDB, but you're going to have to store JSON data from alerts as well as other objects within the frame when alerts come in. Something like this:
{
"detection":{
"object":"person",
"time":"2024-07-29 11:12:50.123",
"camera":"LemmyCam",
"coords": {
"x":"23",
"y":"100",
"w":"50",
"h":"75"
}
}
},
"other_ojects":{
}
}
While it's possible to store this in a flat format in a table. The question is why would you want to. Postgres' JSONB datatype will store the data as efficiently as anything else, while also making it queryable. This gives you the advantage of not having to rework the the table structure if you need to expand the type of data points used in the detection software.
It definitely isn't a solution for most things, but it's 100% valid to use.
There's also the consideration that you just want to store JSON data as it's generated by whatever source without translating it in any way. Just store the actual data in it's "raw" form. This allows you to do that also.
Edit: just to add to the example JSON, the other advantage is that it allows a variable number of objects within the array without having to accommodate it in the table. I can't count how many times I've seen tables with "extra1, extra2, extra3, extra4, ...." because they knew there would be extra data at some point, but no idea what it would be.
The only thing of value at IBM now is Redhat. And there are a lot of people who aren't happy with some of the decisions they made with Redhat.
For now
A child would have to eat something like 10 entire tubes of toothpaste for fluoride to become toxic. Kids are gonna be fine.
Install GreyJay
The level of inaccuracy in a regular clock resulting in drift is orders of magnitude greater than any amount of time dilation you would experience.
This is the reason we use extremely high precision clocks (like atomic clocks) and then synchronize everything else with them. Even your phone's clock would drift noticeably over a period of a few months if it never synced with some network server.
The NTP protocol exists precisely for this. There are entire companies that specialize in providing and maintaining synchronized wall clocks for facilities like hospitals, schools, and other organizations.
Then anyone running a Windows VM would just switch to a Server edition, which is almost exclusively run via a VM.
I think Linus mentioned Redox directly during the interview
I don't glow in the dark, I'm just pretty much see-through. I also burn in a matter of minutes in the sun.
That's why you need to pay for premium so you can get the 1080p premium bitrate.
While not impossible, it's actually considered near impossible by experts. For whatever reason, smaller mammals seem to simply not be affected by rabies.