Consumer CPUs were lacking ECC reporting, so you never really knew if ECC was correcting errors or not.
Lemmchen
I'm not sure what your comment is supposed to contribute. Should the developers stop developing the software? What changes do you expect?
The video discusses criticism of the Linux Foundation and how it spends its funds. While the Linux Foundation is the largest employer of Linux kernel developers, only 2-3% of its budget goes towards that. The rest is spent on various other projects like blockchain, AI, and cloud computing. The video creator argues that the Linux Foundation should allocate more of its funding towards improving the Linux desktop ecosystem, which is underfunded compared to these other initiatives. However, the video acknowledges that the Linux Foundation is beholden to the interests of its corporate members, who likely prioritize the other areas the foundation supports. The video presents the creator's perspective, while recognizing the Linux Foundation's right to spend its money as it sees fit.
Wait, explicit sync is kind of a ~~bug~~ big deal, right?
Lemmy uses Markdown for formatting, just like Reddit.
Shit, this kinda screws with my plans to use the A380 as a transcoding card for my server.
There's a way to run the client on Linux now? Awesome!
Our data includes anonymized API calls to traditional search indexes like Google, Yandex, Mojeek and Brave, specialized search engines like Marginalia, and sources of vertical information like Wolfram Alpha, Apple, Wikipedia, Open Meteo, Yelp, TripAdvisor and other APIs
I don't want to be that guy, but technically they said they are using traditional indexes like Google, not that they are in fact using Google. But I guess that is splitting hairs.
Also, maybe they just dropped Google from their indexes? And what's more: Why does it matter if they are using Google at all, when the results are satisfying?
Knowing which indexes they are using exactly would be nice to know, though.
I don't see how this is relevant to this at all.
If I'm not mistaken "su" stands for "switch user", not " super user".
Old smartphones, old CPUs/GPUs, some SBCs.
Doesn't seem that much simpler, tbh.