Comment Re:Working as intended? (Score 1) 31
If the desired goal of the legislation was to reduce prices for consumers then it failed to achieve that goal. Saying that it's still good anyway just for other reasons is only shifting the posts.
What on earth are you talking about?
This dude always posts strange screeds in fixed width font with unusual punctuation. For you own sanity, I recommend not trying to understand him.
If ffmpeg allows known and published vulnerabilities to languish, the risk here is that organizations that use their code will simply stop using it and will look for other solutions.
Orgs basically have a choice:
1. Suck it up and deal with the whims of people you are not paying a penny to
2. Cough up some cash and contribute
3. Develop their own completely in house/pay for a 3rd party one
2 is almost always way cheaper than 3. Option 4 of "whine incessantly that people you aren't paying aren't working for you fast enough" really needs to stop. I suspect a lot of companies would rather do 3 than 2, because they are not rational.
The VCs want out - many have already gotten out through equity offerings. The equity markets are now tapped out, because these companies are so far from profitability. So now they are tapping the debt markets.
The thing is: there is money to be made here. The current crop of AIs are truly revolutionary, and will only get better. But...profitability is not yet there, and likely won't be for some time. People are still betting that they can pick the winner. There are going to be a lot of tears.
Get as much memory as you can. I think memory is more important than the processor.
Memory is absolutely more important. Upgrade the RAM at build-to-order time and the Mac will run well for 7 or 8 years until they stop upgrading macOS on that model.
If the reality is that China is producing more cars than they can sell, that does not lead to a crash. It leads to them exporting more cars. EV's are a growing market in the world that will eventually have a demand for all that production capacity.
You are assuming these cars are exportable. Things designed for the domestic market can have safety, IP infringement, and other problems if one tries to export them.
You will find these cars at Chinese run worksites around the globe. But that'll just be gov't policy, not some sort of actual demand at these sites.
In China they have an oversupply of vehicles In the Us we have more demand than supply.
No, the US does not have unmet demand. US production slowed due to low demand.
The main US market isn't fully convinced to go EV. The early adopter segment is happy, but that's a very different group of people than the main market. Totally different circumstances, different needs, different concerns,
Should be easy to solve these problems.
Actually transitioning from the early adopter market to the main market is notoriously difficult. A well known and well discussed topic.
It wonâ(TM)t take long for these cars to be exported.
Assuming they are exportable. Things designed for the domestic market can have safety, IP infringement, and other problems if one tries to export them.
Of course it will be stunted by RAM limitations and storage limitations and screen resolution. It will be a miracle if it handles multiple tabs of browsing in a non gimped browser (non stripped down safari). Which is the single task that a Chromebook does well.
I picked up a 2020 MacBook Air M1, 8 GB RAM, 128 GB storage for testing purposes. It is about as low-end as you can get for Apple Silicon-based Macs. I am completely surprised as to how functional and usable it is despite the RAM and storage. This "new" Mac will be a previous-generation MacBook Air, likely called a MacBook SE. In other words, the same pattern we saw with the iPhone SE and Apple Watch SE.
It'll work well for the intended audience. Its not for power users or developers.
Non-Mac users just have no idea how efficient macOS is in dealing with low-RAM situations. Even on x86-based Macs. And Apple Silicon is born to memory-swap!
This 68K-based Mac user, PowerPC-based Mac user, and Intel-based Mac user was surprised too?
Right. The statues were never stolen. That's why I'm confused about how these statues would be repatriated. I'm using China just because it's somewhere that's not Afghanistan that might have a cultural claim.
The reference was to illustrate what some locals do with their cultural inheritance. That repatriation being a good thing depends entirely upon who you are repatriating to. After learning of those statues, would you be OK with repatriating non-Islamic cultural treasures to ISIS, Daesh, Taliban, etc?
Woke AI education is now a thing
Look, I am a firm believer that the UK's computer teaching has been crap and this is extra crap, but what the fuck. Woke? What the fuck are you even talking about.
Do you?
Why not buy a fair phone then which is thicker and has a removable battery.
egrep patterns are full regular expressions; it uses a fast deterministic algorithm that sometimes needs exponential space. -- unix manuals