Breathing considered harmful.
Breathing considered harmful.
Better than nothing, since dead people can’t seek help. It’s always best to fight the source of the problem, but until that’s achieved you should fight the symptoms. The only 2 downsides ich can think about is that a solution for symptoms can make people more reckless and some people might fear the cost. But neither should be a consideration compared to the life of someone.
I have had proton stuff run better than native. But it was probably a shitty native build.
Do you have a source for that claim?
Neither of the C’s stand for cryptography and they don’t even require a blockchain, but can use one.
I have read somewhere that some text can be compressed incredibly efficiently in some AI models. The issue being that the compressed data is worthless without the model and power to recover it.
I mean you could also increase the error correction rate without increasing the company logo size.
The cheapest printer is the one you already own.
Feminism is good, but radical anything is bad. Thats like saying its misandry to speak out against the manosphere.
I had a poodle mix and the nice thing is they don’t shed their fur on their own. Which also helps with allergies.
Faster things that don’t use much more power can be more power efficient with “race to idle”.
I have that on my tablet with most usb c cables. Anker cables are especially bad. And my ikea cable works perfectly.
We do a bit of pension fraud
This doesn’t feel like something that should happen. Like at all. I don’t want experience repairing stuff. I want stuff not breaking. I know mos tpeople here treat a OS like a hobby, but for most people its a tool.
Thats true, but that sadly won’t help against a state forcing a company to put these things into the silicon. Not saying they do rn, but its a real possibility.
I mean can’t they just audit a version that doesn’t have a backdoor/snoops. Verifying against silicon is probably very hard.
How do you want to verify a RISC core not doing something funny?
Hear me out. There is this amazing concept of not doing something you don’t like. Yeah most people don’t know this, but you can indeed just not play games you don’t like.
I see the appeal for the package manager for a lot of things, but space got so incredibly cheap and fast that duplication is way less of a deal than the effort to make stuff work the traditional way. But im not a real linux user. I don’t like tinkering, I want to download something and it works. And the amazing thing is we can have both. If people like spending time to package something be my guest.
The funniest interaction I had recently. I downloaded a program that isn’t in my package manager or had any sort of flatpack/appimage so I downloaded it as a deb and it didn’t run because of some dependency. So I could clone the git and build it from source which might have worked, but I was too lazy to. So I just downloaded the windows exe and ran it through wine, which worked flawlessly.
You aren’t supposed to do serious work over these things. They should be a last resort imo.