the company said it would start turning off Manifest V2 extensions
…in time for Black Friday & the holiday sales?
the company said it would start turning off Manifest V2 extensions
…in time for Black Friday & the holiday sales?
I seem to recall back in (the rose tinted synthpop) 90’s that Notepad was an example of Visual Basic… or at least we created it on a training course…
So, I’m surprised that anyone’s done anything with it.
It’s probably gone from a 12kB .exe to a 2GB file with another 10GB of .dlls
Ooh, didn’t know about this and I listen to music ~16 hours per day!
Just need to capture it: No obvious collector for MythTV, so might have a problem there…
Interesting, I have those on my car and I actively avoid using them.
It can’t cope with anything more than a simple scenario (dim around car in front, deal with on coming car in other lane). If you also have pedestrians and vehicles on side junctions, then you burn their eyes.
So, I’d assumed it was a US feature (straight, wide roads) brought over here
Ah, ok, got a little confused… GeoClue TZ is an improvement on GeoClue
I didn’t even know this was a thing, I just dealt with this manually - now feeling a little silly.
I can confirm that moving the disks to a very similar device will work.
We recovered “enough” data from what disks remained of a Dell server that was dropped (PSU side down) from a crane. The server was destroyed, most of the disks had moved further inside the disk caddy which protected them a little more.
It was fun to struggle with that one for ~1 week
And the noise from the drives…
I have rooftop solar, but only for the house because I can’t reach my car to charge it in the street.
The car sits outside for days (I work from home), so in my case this would be great.
This is the 1st I’ve seen of this car, so haven’t read any other details, but I’d be surprised if external charging wasn’t possible.
Am I the only one questioning the spelling of “tyre“?
And apparently monkey
is only the 6th password attempt to try:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_the_most_common_passwords&action=edit§ion=3
deleted by creator
I don’t have any evidence to backup my statement, but for my usecase (Linux booting troubleshooting toolkit) Kingston sticks last a fair while (~10 years), but Sandisk fail sooner (<5years?)
The main thing I’ve noticed for all brands: there’s no warning before failure. They’re like nicad batteries… all good, then one day - completely dead. So never keep any data on them that you can’t lose.
Good point about the default video source. I had to use “hotel mode” on 1 TV to get that to work… I’ll check what this one does
thanks
Wha?! I didn’t know this was happening… Damn, that was my solution to multiple applications
A single, decent, maintained one for LVM.
Redhat had a couple of goes at this and they suck ass big time and rely on KDE (so no good for any other DE / WM). I’m not sure anything really works, so I’ll say: none exist.
Just a +1 for Open Camera - it’s a great bit of software.
Not sure if it’s the devs to blame when there’s statements like:
Kurtz therefore has the possibly unique and almost-certainly-unwanted distinction of having presided over two major global outage events caused by bad software updates.
So, I’m guessing it’s the business that’s not supporting good dev->test->release practices.
But, I agree with your point; their overall software quality is terrible.
I think they should consider the word “wages” instead.
Let’s be honest, this is compensation for skilled labour.
I would add that a lot of attacks are done after a fix has been released - ie compare the previous release with the patch and bingo - there’s the vulnerability.
But agree, patching should happen regularly, just with a few days delay after the supplier release it.
No it’s Crowdstrike… we’re just seeing an issue with their Windows software, not their Linux software.
I’m curious if anyone’s paying to support development (of either application)?
I’m just about getting all my photos into my NAS, so will be looking at these myself soon