Doesn’t that already exist as the Factory Reset Protection (FRP) partition?
Doesn’t that already exist as the Factory Reset Protection (FRP) partition?
It was initially intended to be a video stream handler, but they had concerns with audio syncing. They figured they might as well also handle audio in one cohesive AV server instead
Hyprland, Wayland native Tiling WM
ret
urn from subroutine, int3 would be something relating to interrupts off the top of my head.
Might want a sled and a ROPe to have a smooth descent
Huh, I was about to correct you on the use of embarrassment in that the intent was to mean a large amount, but it seems a Wiki edit reverted it to your meaning a year ago, thanks for making me check!
'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.
User:
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
Ahhh the comment misspelled it, yep that’s the one. Thanks!
I find it funny it didn’t point out Active Directory
Ooh can I get an equivalent for zsh? :D
I’m genuinely having a chuckle at how shocked people are at my submission, made my day xD
To add on to this explanation, you generally use source ~/.bashrc
to reload your shell whenever you want to make changes to your user config. Tab completion weakens the barrier to destruction significantly (esp. in my case)
source ~/.bash_history
I’ve rarely used CDs/DVDs but AFAIK it’s practically just a copy. Your PC can read the CD’s data, so it just saves that into a file
IIRC, it stands for “If I Remember Correctly”
Just gotta invoke
skynetctl