![](https://infosec.pub/pictrs/image/ffa014c8-749c-4482-8599-b4be5064f8b1.png)
Anyone know what the upstream schedule is? Do these kernel versions map to other distributions?
Anyone know what the upstream schedule is? Do these kernel versions map to other distributions?
It happens in English too — just think about how many people never learned how to properly use paragraphs, quotations, hyphens, parentheses and footnotes.
It’s just the human condition to attempt to communicate in known blobs without thinking about what you’re actually trying to communicate and how it can be most effectively done with the tools at hand.
We’re all single hammer hominids at heart.
At least they can observe the patterns….
Bless your heart.
And he’s just the one who got caught.
What’s new in this release:
Bundled vkd3d upgraded to version 1.11. Initial OpenGL support in the Wayland driver. Support for elevating process privileges. More HID pointer improvements. Various bug fixes.
Yup, including for the largest “in production” regular expression….
It’s definitely a way to get your regex-fu to the next level, especially if you have people to compete against.
I highly recommend https://alf.nu/RegexGolf?world=regex&level=r00
Well, I switched to Edge for work with the latest Chrome update (since internal apps were Chromium only), and was pleasantly surprised. It actually let me turn off almost all the junk, and is responsive in a way I haven’t seen in a Chromium browser in years.
Safari and Firefox for personal use though, and nothing compelling to make me change that.
The reason they’re smaller is that they’re compressed, and expanded during the install process.
For most platforms, the product update is vetted and signed as a functional program, then compressed to save space in transmission, then decompressed and validated prior to swapping with the original.
OS updates and DLCs are available to add new data to an existing system, but this isn’t generally used for discrete parts of a functional program due to the potential for abuse or errors.
Nice touch to target both dev and deploy phases.
234/n/igloo checking in.
I just use the Music app. With the privacy protections turned up and Apple Music disabled. All it does is ply my aac files without sending data back to Apple.
The few people I had using it won’t use it anymore since Signal dropped sms. Best I have been able to do now is talk to people with iMessage.
Well that’s odd, as iOS Signal never supported SMS, and Android phones don’t support iMessage, only SMS.
Computing devices based on Intel Core processors from the 6th Skylake to (including) the 11th Tiger Lake generation are affected.
That’s the core bit.
We have an indication they aren’t — they make claims that are demonstrably untrue.
[edit] actually, the website is pretty clear about what they do and don’t do. It’s only the poster on here who’s overplaying the availability, OSS and privacy angles.
Nope; enterprise Zoom has its own flexible TOS; large companies actually negotiate terma with them (you know, a real TOS contract).
I stopped using the free version in mid-pandemic because of their TOS changes.
Not available (currently) in Canada.
This is why you don’t want to use the “free” version.
I had an issue right when Google started their forced ads thing. It made me suspect uBlock wasn’t updating correctly; manual reinstall and no more issues since.