Hi-fi Rush is really good if you’re into rhythm action, Call of Juarez is one I’m trying now and it feels nice to play
Hi-fi Rush is really good if you’re into rhythm action, Call of Juarez is one I’m trying now and it feels nice to play
AFAIK: Development at AMD funded the dev to make it support AMD GPUs (instead of the then-supported Intel GPUs), Dev keeps a clause saying any and all work will remain open even if contract is cancelled, work is then halted by AMD and dev releases his updates on his repo, Legal then says later that the clause was not legally binding and can’t be enforced or such, making dev rollback to earlier Intel version
Holy hell
That’s the 6502 one you’re talking about though, what about the previous one (granted it still used a bunch of ICs, but not a microcontroller per se)
All good, kudos on the counter pedantry xD
I’ll grant ya that
But that’s more “Don’t underestimate my power” than “You underestimate my power” tho
For added pedanticity, it translates near-literally to “Don’t think less of my power”
Aaaaabsolutely.
That being said, the only thing that’s getting close to my Sidebery tree tabs is LogSeq’s graph, and it’s a close competition. Might end up using the two simultaneously
I remember this old website that the YouTube team had made which visualised the amount of video time getting uploaded per day on YouTube over the years of its existence, and it was on the order of several years per day or something. Gotta find that site again
Add HMD Nokia to the blocking unlocks completely camp
'tis how LLM chatbots work. LLMs by design are autocomplete on steroids, so they can predict what the next word should be in a sequence. If you give it something like:
Here is a conversation between the user and a chatbot. <insert description of chatbot>
<insert chat history here>
User: <insert user message here>
Chatbot:
Then it’ll fill in a sentence to best fit that prompt, much like a creative writing exercise
I doubt we’ll need a whole different OS for Quantum though. That’s like saying we need a whole separate OS for GPUs. I find it more likely that they’ll be yet another accelerator attached to an orchestrating CPU.
Containers, the concept that Docker implements, lets app developers give a self-contained environment for distribution. For devs that means consistency in deployments across environments, which in turn means sysadmins can deploy each of these apps as fully isolated units.
With that, you get really clean installs/updates/uninstalls, and your deployments get done with a well-defined, declarative definition file which can also handle multi service dependencies (a la Docker Compose/K8s)
That might be more due to them not supporting HDR on Linux yet, but I’ll wait for someone else to confirm that
The firmware has to allow it, so if you’ve got physical access to the machine that’s possible. Remote access root, on the other hand, can’t tell the firmware to register new keys as long as it’s configured correctly
Generally yes. For many distros, the kernel signing key is with the distro maintainers and so the package comes with pre-signed kernel images. For distros like Arch and Gentoo, it’s the user’s responsibility to maintain the signing key and sign each updated kernel
Ahhh the comment misspelled it, yep that’s the one. Thanks!
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