

Because tariffs are crude pieces of legislation. The US can’t make their own phones anyway, even with 1000% china tariffs, for years. You can’t just click your fingers and have manufacturing at that scale and quality exist.
Because tariffs are crude pieces of legislation. The US can’t make their own phones anyway, even with 1000% china tariffs, for years. You can’t just click your fingers and have manufacturing at that scale and quality exist.
If you really wouldn’t want a coworker seeing it, it’s NSFW I would say. Personally I think someone even seeing a forum that looks like Reddit open on your work computer is a bit NSFW, but that’s what the tag is for.
I use TrueNAS SCALE at home on my NAS and since they ditched kubernetes (and Truecharts, which was a happy little accident) it’s been great.
It’s free.
New hardware is incorporated into the kernel reasonably regularly IMO.
ZFS file system
Pretty easy to control with GUI exclusively
Docker is now very easy to use, images are community supported mostly but I’ve not had issues with Jellyfin, *arr, pihole, reverse proxy etc.
RIP climate targets
100%,
Ah thank you. I thought zero day and 1 day vulnerabilities were: 0-day = vulnerability is not known to the vendor and so there is no patch. If exploited, it is a 0-day attack. 1-day = vulnerability is known and patch is available, but not all systems are patched.
I.E. the actual number of days doesn’t matter.
Indeed. The <“I’m right. There’s plenty of sources that back me up, do your own research” then fail to provide sources> crowd are my personal pet peeve.
I did… It looks like the bug has been exploited for a couple of weeks now, with a patch only being released on 20th of July? That makes it zero-day
The bug is regarded as a zero-day because the vendor — Microsoft, in this case — had no time to issue a patch before it was actively exploited.
Edit: realised we might have different definition of zero day. Depends whether you consider that the vendor didn’t know about the issue, or there isn’t a patch available upon exploitation of the vulnerability.
This is a zero-day bug though?
You don’t see it everyday that’s for sure.
Can’t believe this poor reading comprehension is getting upvoted.
That’s a charitable way of looking at it. A lot of big egos in academia is my first hand experience, so that’s what I jump to.
I’m guessing he still didn’t admit his work might be wrong at that point?
I’ve got your exact hardware configuration and use case. Pop_OS broke on me after 18 months due to GNOME extensions I think. OpenSUSE Tumbleweed with KDE Plasma works really well for gaming/coding and general use, though I’m dual booting for Ableton Live on windows and the occasional VR.
I don’t believe this screenshot, it would be too perfect
I love that excuse because I don’t ever recall any autistic people zieg heiling.
I have no idea why windows 11 axed that and it just makes the UX worse. It doesn’t even make it simpler for noob users.
This is the easiest way for sure.
Well if the US manufacturers need to import chips (read: the item proposed to be subject to a 100% tariff) in order to make their phone with a “competitive advantage”, as you’ve claimed above, then the manufacturers will be impacted by tariffs.
That cost then gets passed onto the consumer.
The phone assembled in the US using imported parts is directly impacted by tariffs. Consumers only care about the end price, not who paid what tariff and at which point of manufacturing.
I don’t know how many ways people can explain this to you and you don’t get it. I’m assuming you’re trolling because this is extremely basic stuff.