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Have you got concurrency and parallelism swapped around?
Have you got concurrency and parallelism swapped around?
Typing speed measured in flops
I use fWallet for my plane tickets
If it doesn’t fulfill the requirements it’s not any kind of solution
That’s a completely different statement
This article seems to have a bizarre assumption all the way through that the schools must use Microsoft 365.
Obviously Microsoft is failing morally and probably legally (what else is new), but the schools also have a moral and legal requirement to choose software which protects the rights of the children. Microsoft is sort of right in the way they surely didn’t mean; schools have the responsibility to not use Microsoft 365.
While that is a definition that’s used by some, I would argue The OSI’s Open Source Definition is more widely used within the field
If anyone is considering how to avoid this on their own site: https://indieweb.org/URL_design
There is an actually moral alternative to opt-out that doesn’t have the poor-sampling problem of opt-in: ask for consent explicitly.
There are multiple ways depending on the version of electron the app was built against
Electron applications are notorious and prolific, and resolutions are very specific to versions and details of the program’s build process.
Steam can be a big old flashy boi
And they still maintain their SteamOS, although it is only supported on Steam Decks.
It’s not important, but there is no connection between the original Steam OS and there new one. The original was an Ubuntu derivative, and there new one is an Arch derivative.
Avoiding spyware doesn’t mean you’re opposed to labor-saving technology
They confined their attacks to manufacturers who used machines in what they called “a fraudulent and deceitful manner” to get around standard labor practices. “They just wanted machines that made high-quality goods,” says Binfield, “and they wanted these machines to be run by workers who had gone through an apprenticeship and got paid decent wages. Those were their only concerns.”
I assume less custom configs are better, but I’ve seen Ansible yaml files that are just convoluted bash scripts written in yaml, which makes them even more convoluted.
It’s not clear from your post whether you’ve read the article. In case you haven’t, it’s not really about printers.
It’s a watermelon. It’s used as a symbol for Palestine due to it’s alignment with the colours of the flag
I appreciate the ambiguity in your comment created by the missing pronoun.
There are a few PCB drones out there.
Most PCBs, even really cheap ones, are made from FR-4, which is a very robust fibreglass. It’s would be a pretty decent choice for drone components in general.
Not drones, but Carl Bugeja on YouTube makes some fascinating machines almost entirely out of PCBs (although he uses a lot of flex PCBs, not just FR-4).
The coal plants are decommissioning due to costs, renewable energy is booming, and (obviously due to the ban) there is no local nuclear industry or expertise. Even if you manage to lift the ban, which nobody is trying to do*, nuclear would not be replacing coal plants here, but might divert renewable funding. In other countries I have no doubt building more nuclear could offset coal, not here.
* The coalition claims to be in favour of nuclear power, but they’ve spruiked it before in opposition, and nothing gets tabled when they’re in power. It’s got as much chance of happening as high speed rail.
Simulink has a concept called Test Harnesses which are models that isolate individual blocks for testing. The tests themselves are then driven programmatically from MATLAB