SMillerNL

@SMillerNL@lemmy.world
0 Post – 75 Comments
Joined 1 years ago

I think decisions they take outside their role as a judge can be punished just fine.

Tesla may have won out on this test because its Pepsi drivers were more focused on long-distance distribution, while other manufacturers represented were making more frequent regional stops. For example, the longest mileage day for the Tesla Semi incorporated just five stops, while the Nikola made 13 deliveries and one of the eCascadias did 10.

That’s a pretty big caveat to put halfway through the article.

War is bad.

Nobody was trying to secede. Ukrainians would like to stay Ukrainian and it’s good to help people who want help.

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As an ARM Mac user, I wouldn’t trade all this new battery life for an x86 processor

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I wish I was surprised

Why does it make (commercial) sense for AMD/Intel to create so many models?

Because there is demand for various types of systems. And on top of that, if you make a chip with 8 cores and two are defective… just sell a 6 core chip instead of throwing it away.

What are their incentives?

Money

What would happen, if they would reduce the amount of different CPUs they offer? (Is there historical knowledge?)

They would lose customers to competitors in that space. When AMD didn’t make EPYC chips, all servers were Intel Xeon.

It’s not, they’re not open sourcing their driver. They’ve made an open source driver.

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Seeing how they presented arguments in court, they seem to care a little bit

If they were random targets, sure. But the messaging clearly included the wish to strike military targets at long range. Don’t have to lose people to a aerial bomb if the plane carrying it has been destroyed by a long range strike.

How is “requires a permit, medical test and no criminal record” the same as the US?

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Linux is a big part of it, but not all of Linux. Linux also isn’t part of the GNU project that the OP talks about.

Italian?

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Depends on the project, but for a lot of projects code review is mandatory before merging. For XZ the sole maintainer can do whatever they want.

You won’t talk your way out of that one

And somewhere in the Terms of Service it says you have to give up your first born child. Or maybe it doesn’t, but nobody will ever know because nobody reads more than is strictly required.

Apple already stopped selling x86 devices and even the stuff that is not under their control seems to work fine

“Places you can’t afford”, like teachers and nurses wanting to live in the same county as their place of employment?

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Wouldn’t those two be directly at odds with each other? I would have a hard time describing anything without encryption as “privacy focused”.

If it’s open source you can generally configure it as insecurely as you want though.

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They could very well get evidence without wanting to name someone. Protecting sources is pretty normal in journalism

Are they long, super verbose and often incorrect?

The Guardian is a British publication

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Building an open source project is not just a technical challenge. It's a social one as well, and politics are a big factor in that.

The hot parts aren’t compatible with high heat sounds right on par for Boeing

Why would France want to fight? They’re the biggest customer.

https://www.politico.eu/article/france-talk-tough-ukraine-while-gobble-up-more-russia-gas/

High jump has judges, so does boxing. I’d say both are sports people would expect in the olympics.

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He’s the head of the biggest party. He didn’t personally win since NL doesn’t vote for heads of state on a personal basis.

You really have a lot of faith in the organising capacity of all collective western governments when they can’t even agree on some pretty basic stuff.

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That would work if the only problem they wanted to solve was an outdated tech stack for X. But there are other problems that wayland addresses too, like: how to scale multiple monitors nicely, is it a good idea to give all other apps the keystrokes that you do in the one in focus (and probably a lot more)

Probably more directly referencing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ptfmAY6M6aA

Even paid it might be hard to find maintainers with knowledge of the code

Nextcloud actually has an RSS reader app

https://i.imgflip.com/5epb11.jpg

If it collects user data it is not. If it collects “1 person downloaded an update” it’s perfectly fine

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If the company uses a reference to you to make money, I’d definitely feel entitled to compensation.

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Couple of years since I switched and I rarely run into any issues with my all-AMD build

In the EU the answer would be that we’re subsidising cattle farmers for enormous amounts of money

To support E2EE in RCS?

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I’m guessing a lot of it seeing how tons of apps use open source components and libraries whenever possible.