B.S. Biology; M.S. in Bioinformatics. ❤️ tech, FOSS, Lana Del Rey, Linux, Fedora, KDE, but also ARM MacBooks & iOS.
Good @ Python, forced to use R, learning Rust.
🎮 Prey (2017), Bioshock, Portal & Dead Space.
Bi, more into guys atm.
@hyfi:matrix.org
also ndr@beehaw.org
Re: rant. Yeah, normally none of that goes to the authors of the paper. So you’re not really taking anything away from them.
Theft because they copied your comment.
I’m using Memmy, Mlem, Liftoff, Thunder and wefwef lmao
Even without texture packs, just cranking all settings to the max on a very old game does this.
If you don’t see the enemies, some parts of System Shock 2 look really neat if you render it at the highest resolution possible.
Haha, same here! I was so proud I knew what the title was referring to before reading the post. Lol
I have plenty of RAM and I run Linux on a VM. Works like a charm. You can even use open source hypervisors like UTM.
I wouldn’t bother running it on bare metal just yet.
I do trust the devices on my network but I guess I’ll probably look into how to setup HTTPS.
This has the best explanation I’ve seen: https://sfconservancy.org/blog/2023/jun/23/rhel-gpl-analysis/
In particular, see the section “What Exactly Is the RHEL Business Model?”.
Or, if you want a short sentence to read only:
Whether that analysis is correct is a matter of intense debate, and likely only a court case that disputed this particular issue would yield a definitive answer on whether that disagreeable behavior is permitted (or not) under the GPL agreements.
The point is that it does not violate the GPL.
Yes. I just don’t know if it’s good to phrase it as “RHEL customers are legally allowed to share the code”, since as soon as they do it they won’t be allowed to be customers anymore lol (assuming Red Hat finds out)
It’s simple: they can redistribute it since it’s GPL, but if they do so, they break their business contract with RedHat, so they’re not customers anymore and can’t see the source code in the future.
GPL doesn’t mean that they must give the code to everyone, only that you have those rights as long as you have the software. So RedHat is not forced to have everyone as a customer, and according to them, distributing the code kicks you out.
They can still re-distribute the current source they have, but will not have access to future source code.
The Arch Linux pipeline is real, folks.
There’s already a protest on Reddit. Marked as duplicate. Removed. /s
What about The Internet Archive? Search engines cache? Copies made by other people? etc.
This is a public platform; don’t share things you don’t want to be shared. You can’t truly expect anything being deleted forever everywhere.
I don’t understand this question. This is a public platform, there are no secret messages or info. What do you mean by privacy? Hide what from whom?
I despite this “trend” of considering just simple opinions and basic statements as “political”. It’s been watered down and turned into a meaningless tag.
I might actually end up disabling swap in the end. I wanted to update that apparently I “fixed” the problem (not sure if permanently) by turning off the pc, unplugging the PSU, and holding down the power button for 30 seconds. Normal reboots weren’t enough. I’ll take it for now.