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Living 20 minutes into the future. Eccentric weirdo. Virtual Adept. Time traveler. Thelemite. Technomage. Hacker on main. APT 3319. Not human. 30% software and implants. H+ - 0.4 on the Berram-7 scale. Furry adjacent. Pan/poly. Burnout.
I try to post as sincerely as possible.
I’ve been saying, Microsoft hired Poettering to thank him for fucking up Linux so much with systemd.
That would be far too helpful.
Check out Slackware. There is still a 32-bit version that is said to work on older Pentium-class machines.
Change up the kinds of malware they write.
Do people seriously not keep copies of their finished work anymore? They just post them and delete the local copy?
I thought that feature was built into it, but okay.
Folks have made it - I think ollama was name-checked specifically because it’s on Github and in Homebrew and in some distros’ package repositories (it’s definitely in Arch’s). I think some folks (at least) aren’t talking about it because of the general hate-on folks have for LLMs these days.
Either the article’s author has an editor who made the change, or the author knows what side his bread’s buttered on.
I mean, even then it might not work. I’m wrestling with it right now (Lemur Pro 13 from System76) and from plain old suspend mode the machine still wakes up randomly (it pops up on my monitoring network as active, and can even be SSH’d into when it’s supposed to be in lower power mode). Also, suspend-to-disk hibernation only resumes correctly about 13% of the time (I’ve been keeping stats while debugging it).
You are not the only person. However, even hibernation mode isn’t a sure thing anymore.
Sleep is hit-or-miss even on System76 laptops. Dead simple on my XPS, though.
“Those who would repeat the past must control the teaching of history.”
MS-DOS up until about 1995 or 1996. Slackware until 1997. Debian until 1998. Slackware again until 2000. Debian again until 2005. Gentoo until 2012. Arch up to the present.
Companies and organizations.
You don’t say.
Outfits that haven’t installed patches since February are getting popped in May by a vuln that was published in January.
Trying to kill the Internet Archive would set just the precedent publishers want to kill community libraries.
I’d be surprised if the big publishers didn’t try setting up their own pay-for-access libraries in a few years.