You can always install an EV conversion kit to old cars.
redcalcium
Mullvad is going to sell subscriptions to both sides, right? Assuming Sweden is going to be neutral again during WW3.
Or perhaps not because Sweden just joined NATO last month.
Google, who was famous for employing Guido van Rossum (creator of Python) is now firing their python team. I wonder why they didn't reassign them to the ML/AI division.
Guido van Rossum is working at Microsoft now.
FBI would arrest jellyfin devs so fast before they can hit the release button.
Sunshine: https://github.com/LizardByte/Sunshine
Moonlight: https://moonlight-stream.org/
It's mostly used for gaming, but it's more like a souped up vnc with hardware acceleration support and low latency. I mostly use it to access my desktop remotely instead of for gaming. You can tune it between low latency or high quality depending on your use case.
Being a successful politician in China may allow you to control large companies. Being a successful businessman in US may allow you to control political parties. I guess the endgame is the same for powerful people in both countries.
This is low. Imagine if you're unemployed, doing rounds of job interviews and got hit with this mess.
If you have a smart tv or chromecast ultra, you can install moonlight directly in your tv. If you're still using a computer for the tv, at the very least using moonlight won't make your client computer's fan spins like crazy. You can even replace it with a low power computer like a raspberry pi.
I mean, have you checked kids videos on YouTube? I remember getting dumbfounded when I watched some of the "stories". LLM would fit right in.
I thought DJI has an R&D office in California? Is that just for show and the actual R&D is done in Shenzhen?
Yeah, it's kinda hard to find good stats because Linux users hate telemetry. I doubt there is an accurate desktop environments market share stats out there. Might as well conduct our own poll here and see the stats for this community.
Google Reader was the best. Not sure why Google killed it, but it was really good at both content discovery and keeping up with sites you're interested in. I tried several alternatives but nothing came close, so I gave up and hung out more on forums / link aggregators like slashdot, hacker news, reddit and now lemmy for content discovery. I'm also interested to hear what others use.