Posts
1295
Following
84
Followers
125
Riding horses, hacking computers, phones and smartwatch.
@ljs @ptesarik Actually, emacs is fine on on Thinkpad X220, and is also fine on Thinkpad X60. But for some reason, it does not like PinePhone. Dunno, either emacs is getting fat too quickly, or PinePhone has too small cache or something. Anyway, learning to use mg would be good idea long term...
0
0
2
@ptesarik @ljs Funny, I thought it was for Eight Megabytes And Constantly Swapping. Unfortunately, that was long time ago, and now emacs lags even on 4-core, 3GB machine... I'm using "mg" on some of those.
1
0
3
@farcaller Clearly shows up that Apple is abusing its monopoly power :-(.
0
0
0
@thomholwerda They have blood on their hands, but that does not mean it would be clever to hit them. Nor "legal" w.r.t. international law. In a same way, Putler can't just hit Poland. Especially hitting China would be very, very stupid.
0
0
0
@dermoth @monsieuricon Actually, I believe constitution simply did not expect people would be crazy enough to vote for convinced felon. Thus questions like "does insurrection disqualify him" and "can he pardon himself" not having clear answers. Nobody (but Simpsons) expected this level of crazyness :-(.
0
0
1
@dermoth @monsieuricon No longer allowed in Canada? Anyway, I can kind-of understand the rules; that does not mean they make sense in country with working courts such as USA.
1
0
0
@monsieuricon (Imagine police under Trump's control "finding" marijuana at Biden. Similar stuff happened in the east.)
0
0
0
@monsieuricon Made up is made up. This is different attack. Get a book on East europe history...
0
0
0
@monsieuricon Do you believe charges were made-up to rig an election?
1
0
0
@monsieuricon Not necessary for preventing this kind of attack :-). For Russia-style country, it is easy to rig election by convincing Havel on something made up. It is not so easy to convince 10% of population in the same way.
1
0
0
@monsieuricon In current situation it is strange, but otherwise it makes sense. It is "public knows best who they want", and it prevents "lets convince him of something so that he can't be elected" play not-uncommon in Russia-style politics.
2
0
0
@craftyguy @der_istvan @cas Yeah, actually. So mine is not brick, but Droidian is all I can boot, and and got two "red" warnings per boot. So... some help would be welcome, too :-).
0
0
1
@vegard @ljs @mcepl @mort @joshbressers @gregkh @vbabka Yes, but traditionally, CVEs were for vulnerabilities, not ordinary bugs.
0
0
2
@gregkh @ljs @joshbressers @mcepl @mort @vbabka People were "abusing" the system, so you turned "abuse" to eleven. Average CVE quality was better before.
0
0
2
@pony That is actually quite common (not a first person this year). Jet engines suck a lot :-).
0
0
1
@oleksandr @djasa @piggo @pony @lkundrak It is bad. 100 years ago y and i were pronounced differently. These days, they are not in most of the country... so good luck making text to speech. "sli jsme domu" vs. "sly jsme domu" is undecidable.
0
0
1
@kernellogger @oleksandr @torvalds I'd really like to see description of a bug it fixes before patch being merged. Less than 10% have that. We have rules saying "bugs only" and "no theoretical bugs", but warning fixes are merged all the time and so are workarounds for various checkers.
0
0
2
@mkyral @amarok @voyager @itsfoss I even have swap on SSD. They should handle it just fine, unless you are overwriting every single byte every hour or something like that.
1
0
2
@sesivany @amarok @voyager Manufacturers quote so high Terrabytes-written numbers that it should not really be problem for rolling distro. SD cards were easy to kill, but I don't believe modern SSDs have similar problem.
0
0
2
@airtower So you got three slices of bread, because or was arithmetic? :-)
1
0
0
Show older