"Free Copilot in your GitHub account" is the 2020s version of "Free U2 album on your iPod".
#Linux kernel version 4.19.y is EOL. 4.19.325 will be the final version. You can check your kernel version with `cat /proc/version`. If your system is running such an old LTS kernel, consider moving to one of the many newer LTS versions listed on kernel.org:
* 6.6
* 6.1
* 5.15
* 5.10
* 5.4
https://lore.kernel.org/all/2024120520-mashing-facing-6776@gregkh/
Can you find an ITW 0-day from crash logs? Project Zero finds out
The #LinuxKernel's stable team extended the support timeframe for #Linux 6.11 from four to five years:
https://www.kernel.org/releases.html
To quote @gregkh from https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/docs/kernel/website.git/commit/?id=e6083565a79c3d711c1a76d9312b8c00e06b826b:
'" Bump 6.1.y support up to 5 years.
Giving people a chance to phase in the shorter lifespans, if at all possible. Hopefully this should help a bit.'"
are you a programmer? do you like heavy metal? would you like to be *really upset* by a music video?
do i have something for you.
"Census III of Free and #OpenSource Software: Application Libraries leans on more than 12M data points from security tools such as Black Duck, FOSSA, Snyk, and Sonatype, which have been deployed at more than 10k companies"
https://techcrunch.com/2024/12/04/linux-foundation-report-highlights-the-true-state-of-open-source-libraries-in-production-apps/ #cybersecurity
In today’s news: man with zero self reflection goes on lengthy one sided rant highlighting just that.
#Linux 6.12 is out. For a list of new features see:
* This short LWN story: https://lwn.net/Articles/997958/ (screenshotted)
* Two detailed stories from LWN: https://lwn.net/Articles/990750/ & https://lwn.net/Articles/991301/
* The kernelnewbies page: https://kernelnewbies.org/Linux_6.12
See also the announcement from @torvalds:
https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/CAHk-=wgtGkHshfvaAe_O2ntnFBH3EprNk1juieLmjcF2HBwBgQ@mail.gmail.com/
'"No strange surprises this last week, so we're sticking to the regular release schedule, and that obviously means that the merge window opens tomorrow."'
{sigh} Go home CodeQL, you are drunk…
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
Poorly documented function: fewer than 2% comments for a function of 129 lines.
Code in question is at: https://github.com/gregkh/usbutils/blob/master/lsusb.c#L3835 if people are curious. It’s as if the tool hasn’t seen C code before…
#usbutils (which contains lsusb and the more modern lsusb.py) 018 is out:
https://lore.kernel.org/all/Zxd0oZefuehqhA7z@kroah.com/
@gregkh writes:
'"For users, the largest change will be that the '-v' option to lsusb will now show the negoitated speed of the device on the bus […], and there is better handling for new device descriptor fields and information in the '-v' output as well."'
So… O’Reilly sent me email today hyping up how my books (really, just the one, I assume) is going to be AI-translated into Spanish and German, with other languages to follow. This was probably inevitable, but I still have concerns.
First: are there no human translators of these languages?
Second: who’s going to proof-read all 1,126 pages to make sure nothing got botched, especially given the technical nature of the content? The readers? Which isn’t even crowd-sourcing: it’s customer-sourcing.
Every language has an optimization operator. In C++ that operator is //'