Nvidia drivers have had way more issues with mobile chips than with desktop. GPU compute workloads (including things like Blender) are very well supported. Nvidia on Linux has dominated the compute market for a long time.
Nvidia drivers have had way more issues with mobile chips than with desktop. GPU compute workloads (including things like Blender) are very well supported. Nvidia on Linux has dominated the compute market for a long time.
They aren’t accommodating the gambling industry. It’s a bug fix for a media player issue. The text in the changelog comes from the bug report title. The bug isn’t specific to that site, and neither is the fix.
While ZDI reported the vulnerability to the Exim team in June 2022 and resent info on the flaw at the vendor’s request in May 2023, the developers failed to provide an update on their patch progress.
Yikes. Sitting on a critical RCE in internet exposed server software for a year. That’s a great way to destroy trust in a project.
Syncthing is another good cloud-free option.
After creating it with mkpart, are you formatting it with mkfs.btrfs? You need to both steps (create partition and format it). Also, try running partprobe or rebooting after making changes so that the kernel re-detects it.
There is a filesystem type field in the partition table. Formatting the partition won’t change it. Delete the partition and recreate it with the correct filesystem type. In parted you can do that with “mkpartfs”.
But then building it still requires whatever scripting tool you use. Including the bash-ified version would not for practice, as it wouldn’t be very human readable and would have to be kept in sync with the source script. It’s much cleaner and simpler to just require python for your build environment.
I don’t see why bash would be used at all here. If you want something that doesn’t need another interpreter, then just compile a binary.
Pinecil works OK for small things, but struggles on larger joints because of it’s low power and small thermal mass. Personally, I’d prefer one of the many Hakko/Weller clones for a cheap solution.
Have you tried 3D printing enclosures? There’s a bit of up front cost if you don’t have a printer already, but after that the material costs are pretty cheap. It’s really cool to be able to make a custom enclosure with all the cutouts, integrated standoffs, panel markings, etc all in a single print.
If you like mechanical pencils and want some color, look up clutch pencils. I apologize in advance for fueling your addiction.
One that can take a USB storage device or an SD card would be much better. Same result, but no messing around with discs and it can hold way more music.
Running it in a dedicated VM is usually the more expensive option, particularly with something simple like DNS.
I think he missed the point.
I did exactly this as well. Only I bought my own 433Mhz weather sensors. They are cheap and the batteries last for ages.
Immutable/offline backups. If you backup to local physical media (HDD/tape), physically disconnect/eject it and store it somewhere safe. If you back up to cloud storage (S3, etc), many of them have immutability options. If configured properly nobody (not even you) can delete or modify the backups (within the specified time period).