

It defined the genre in a lot of ways. There’s a reason so many 80s flicks tried to emulate it on the cheap. It’s the same as “Star Wars” to so many “Battle Beyond the Stars” movies that followed.
It defined the genre in a lot of ways. There’s a reason so many 80s flicks tried to emulate it on the cheap. It’s the same as “Star Wars” to so many “Battle Beyond the Stars” movies that followed.
That packaging would make me question if it’s actually legally cheese. It’s like it’s avoiding saying the word.
So it’s labelled “tasty cheese”?
That suggests that you can only buy cheddar there. No other types of cheese.
The Linux Unplugged podcast did something similar to an old Arch based server. Only one year out of date, but they had a similar experience.
Your problem isn’t Arch. It’s the fact that the Weyland experience is still under development and so not stable release to release.
This will be true on any distro.
If your solution is to freeze your distro in a certain point in time, don’t type pacman
anymore.
More interesting question IMHO — what language do you dream in?
mascot is a furry face in a black leather mask
That’s what you see?
I think a few Rorschach tests might be in your future.
I recruit some people into this band. It always amazes me how much people care about whether they are paid £100k or £110k. The difference is about than £72 a week when they’re already getting paid over £1,300 a week (after tax).
Ego.
Depends on two things
Tools like perf
on Linux can get you access to your processors performance counters and you’ll be able to see how many “events” occur while a process is running.
What’s an event? Well they can be configured to monitor all sorts of things in the CPU. Instructions executed, Interrupts, page table misses, and on some loads / stores.
Memory systems on a CPU aren’t straightforward though. They contain multiple levels of cache, each of which reduces the number of accesses which go to the next layer. So depending on which level you measure, you’ll get different numbers.
Communicating to them what having them In your life means to you.
So more like a charity status?
I agree with what you’re saying, that the attack didn’t require any data breach to take place, but I do have one slightly pedantic point.
Codeberg being non-profit does not make the employees “volunteers”. They are normal employees and take a wage like working for any other company. What’s different is that any excess revenue over costs must be used to continue the company’s objectives and is not able to be taken by the company owners as profit.
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Network transparency
Pretty much anything over 10,000 employees. You can’t really organise that many people in a productive way. Let’s face it… You’re exploiting something.
Lurking account on a different instance.
I knew as I wrote it that somebody would come along and say “Wine/Proton is not an emulator” but I didn’t want to get into the detail.
No, but what else are you going to do stuck up power pylon.