Why does the USA have jurisdiction over what TSMC (a Taiwanese company, AFAIK) does with their manufacturing tools, even if they come from the US?
Why does the USA have jurisdiction over what TSMC (a Taiwanese company, AFAIK) does with their manufacturing tools, even if they come from the US?
You could look into low profile GPUs. Off the top of my head, the 3050 is probably the strongest of those, unless you’re willing to look into the A-class cards
This is also super useful for people deciding what to buy, when the vendor would obviously not be keen to let you plug a USB into their device and boot into the scary Linux
Will this work even if the drives are different sizes?
I tried Tempo and it seems to do the job well!
There’s some features I wish were present, like selecting multiple songs, but the feature list is quite good regardless
Not a pro by any means, but I mount my internal drives at /mnt. Its also where I mount my NAS
AFAIK mount point doesn’t matter
I haven’t been able to use it. I’m on Endeavour with KDE and every time I try to log in with Wayland I get a black screen and a very laggy mouse. The programs I open have streaks of black through them and are also laggy Not sure if I have some weird stuff installed in the background, but I’ve had to go back to X11
undisclosed
WhatsApp vulnerability
lets governments see who you message
You tell them, Kwi-Chang! No more big government!
You can install Heroic Games launcher, which is an alternative Epic + GOG front-end (it also works on Windows and is apparently better than the real thing). You can use it to manage the compatibility layers similarly to Steam, but in my experience its function is on a game-by-game basis
As another commenter has said, go through ProtonDB and check all the games you can’t live without
I can’t. He wears it too well
Off-topic, but there’s a cat that lives nearby that has your name
The sensors have sharp senses
Fuck it, give the students maps
Give the teacher maps
Everyone gets a map!
Not a whole lot of experience distro-hopping here (went from Ubuntu to Endeavour and haven’t really changed since) but from what I know it seems like most distros have their place. Arch is highly customisable and all rolling release distros are good for gamers and those who need the latest software. Debian, Ubuntu, Mint, and other LTS distros are good for servers and newcomers (fewer big updates and therefore fewer potential crises)
For the sake of answering the question, I’d say Ubuntu is my least favourite. Its pretty bloated, and then there’s the whole snap fiasco
Do you use a service for the relays, or is it possible to self-host?
Not an expert, but to me it sounds like the issue is that “on demand” uses the iGPU for regular desktop parts and calls for the dGPU when you switch to something requiring more horsepower
The problem with this might be that the execution of this is slow and there’s a few seconds between the iGPU switching off and the dGPU switching on
Considering that normally most people don’t care at all, I’ll take what I can get
Both companies have way too much power to be judged appropriately
My tired brain looked at the thumbnail and thought that CRINK was some new onomatopoeia for wine glasses being tapped together