You got 4-6 years to reach this price realistically.
It doesn’t support sms anymore. You can only message Signal users.
You don’t get fast random access. So you have to read the whole tape if it’s near the end.
I started working on one but don’t have much time.
The interesting repos:
Unfortunately they don’t publish any api docs.
Pass is excellent. Drive is just now getting better. Calendar is pretty lame.
All games are x86, so you’ll get that 10-40% CPU overhead.
Steam itself doesn’t even support 64bit, let alone arm.
You can play Epic Games too, but then it becomes a chore to setup.
With the recent advancements in AI it could say confusing nonsense in the chat…
Neither Chromium nor Gecko have a stable public API. Companies are just willing to spend money rebasing every Chromium update.
If the content is ripped by somebody then they shouldn’t use HEVC, thats a community decision. No legal distribution of HEVC exist AFAIK.
The good news is no streaming service even supports UHD in browers (except Netflix on Edge?) because of DRM. So I don’t see the value.
Kid has completely destroyed up my YouTube algorithm. It's part of the reason I signed up for nebula.
Just FYI you can either use YouTube kids, or just make another account to easily keep separate profiles.
There's no TV-Y7 or TV-G ratings on YouTube.
YouTube kids is.
That source looks better indeed.
Ars quotes nonsense like “bypasses the security” and “exploit the user”.
Those terms have meaning and they aren’t applicable here.
At the end though they do say things like
is able to hack your phone from the moment you install the app
Without any credible evidence.
The claim is they completely bypass all Android and iOS security is pretty unbelievable.
If so then the real discussion is how these zero day exploits are just sitting around.
EDIT: It seems the focus is on Android but all the information is nonsensical, like AI generated buzzword bingo.
Every package has an architecture but you never have to care about it.
No its not, the package is literally “htop”.
I think you are mistaken. An example:
https://archlinux.org/packages/core/x86_64/glib2/
https://packages.fedoraproject.org/pkgs/glib2/glib2/
Debian:
https://packages.debian.org/bookworm/libglib2.0-0
https://packages.debian.org/bookworm/libglib2.0-cil
This is the common case, but Debian gets really out there some times.
And I'll just say dnf
is a much easier to use tool:
dnf install /usr/bin/aprogram
dnf install 'pkgconfig(glib-2.0)'
As a packager I’ll just say Debian is the one with the weird package names. Fedora just matches upstream names generally, similar to Arch.
Fedora will live without red hat. It’s got a community structure in place, all infrastructure is open, etc.
Obviously it would lose some funding and manpower but other distros get by.