Comment Re:That will be the year (Score 1) 36
I think you will find plenty of GNU software in the "Help...About" menu, and in the command line console it sure does look like GNU/Linux to me.
I think you will find plenty of GNU software in the "Help...About" menu, and in the command line console it sure does look like GNU/Linux to me.
About that e-waste thing: I have several Chromebooks that I really liked over the past decade and a half but after three to five years the batteries wear out. It's almost like they're planned to wear out once Google support runs out.
Here's a technical discussion over at Reddit.
What about the Cyrix people?
I'm curious how many of the original Cyrix engineers are still working and are they also at Intel or are they at VIA?
The internal competition between Cyrix and Centaur around the time of the VIA acquisition would be a good book to read.
Loongson is still a MIPS derivative, not "indigenous" as they like to call it.
At least it's multicore now, so there's that.
Sure, and so do my handheld game devices that use 128 GB and 256 GB cards.
I use Rufus on Windows to format them but pretty much any other utility can do it (and I'm just guessing the latest versions of FORMAT.EXE can do it, too).
For whatever reason these handheld game devices come with 64 GB SD Cards formatted with FAT32 in a clear demonstration of how the FAT32 limitation can be exceeded, even if it's not the most efficient way to store data because the cluster size (minimum file size) gets kinda large.
Meanwhile, we have Hygon "HygonGenuine" and Zhaoxin " Shanghai " processors, both licensed for use in China by AMD and VIA, respectively.
In case you missed it, Hygon is the AMD license and is producing AMD processors in China.
Pretty sure your timing is off more than a decade.
That 32 GB FAT32 limit sure is arbitrary. Third-party utilities (and Linux) can format it to any size you want.
The subscription Microsoft 365 Family is well worth the cost for the 5 TB of OneDrive storage at 1 TB for each user.
Not only that, but each family member is allowed to install five copies of Office 365 on their computers. That's a potential 25 copies of Office 365 and 5 TB of OneDrive storage for $100/year.
You don't want to. It has Compro, a lead-tainted human manure in it.
Except for not having tile sprites, the IIgs was about as powerful as the Super Nintendo, CPU-wise, and had better sound.
The vendor says they don't store any data and only use the information to activate the screen.
Why does Arse Technica say it has a database?
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