So all bets are off? If violence is inevitable and the alternative is a de facto dictatorship, maybe the liberal Americans should strike first while they still can, e.g., assassinating orange man and other conservative leaders.
> A signal handler race condition was found in OpenSSH's server (sshd), where a client does not authenticate within LoginGraceTime seconds (120 by default, 600 in old OpenSSH versions), then sshd's SIGALRM handler is called asynchronously. However, this signal handler calls various functions that are not async-signal-safe, for example, syslog().
I don't know about the "traitor" thing. Edward Snowden would definitely make a better president than Trump.
How can they still operate with 1B in debt? There's no way they are ever going to be able to repay that in a reasonable time frame
If it fits the community, just post away. Not everyone browses All.
Maybe because that is more dangerous than any other use?
I would be very careful with the kind of speculation the other commenter proposed. Those things are very popular science-ey and almost unverifiable at the moment, it's hard to tell if there is even any actual academic research behind many of these "theories" that get thrown around by some laypersons. And even if there are actual publications behind such proposals, as in this case, the validity of their theses is far from certain. It is a very theoretical domain in which new knowledge can easily be "hallucinated" without much connection to physical reality, even - or in particular - by professions.
An 8 GB memory VPS should be sufficient to run quantised LLMs, and the client could simply parse the Lemmy posts, send them to the server and get the translated results back. Shouldn't be expensive imho.
More like the author is so insecure herself that she feels forced to use these terms in the belief that they somehow strengthen her position.
Unfortunately, there are plenty enough humans to come up with stupid shit like this.
Drivers are included in the kernel, you will always have them.
More often than not, it is the companies themselves that commit drivers for their hardware to the Linux kernel
People using the cross for scalar multiplication are insane
As your own quote says, we can at least hope that if it passes, it will be found illegal by the courts and get rescinded.
Interesting, but there's not much meat to this story yet. We'll see how it'll be
That's not what proprietary means. The dualism is proprietary/free (as in freedom), not proprietary/public.
I agree. For me, it wasn't Kenobi but Book of Boba Fett. I really enjoyed the show, however, when I went online, somehow all Star Wars fans called it the worst ever made.
I recently wanted to buy a product from a manufacturer and luckily they offered PayPal as a payment method. However, after I signed into my PayPal account, it wouldn't show my bank account as a payment option and instead prompted me to add a card or bank account, despite my account being fully confirmed and direct debit activated. PayPal customer service reps told me that maybe the retailer blocked direct debit through PayPal and I should try adding a credit card, however, why would they do that if they offer non-PayPal direct debit anyway? The customer service reps further told me that my account was in good standing, so there shouldn't be any problems with trust etc. Have you ever encountered an online shop that refused direct debit when handled by PayPal?
Do you think it will be possible to run GNU/Linux operating systems on Microsoft's brand new "Copilot+ PCs"? The latter ones were unveiled just yesterday, and honestly, the sales pitch is quite impressive! A Verge article on them: Link
That price may have more to do with the iPhone 15 than the Vision Pro.
"While developers start work on building Vision Pro apps, the potential for people upgrading to the iPhone 15 this year is a big reason for investor optimism."
Aspartame being a possible carcinogen doesn’t mean what you think.
"The IARC will reportedly classify aspartame as a possible carcinogen. But this isn’t a food safety agency, and the context matters."