Musk is an absolute idiot. But I’d rather pay for a system than have it mine me for data. I’m guessing he wants to do both though. Because that’s what he does with Tesla cars.
Nerd, professional solver of imaginary problems
Musk is an absolute idiot. But I’d rather pay for a system than have it mine me for data. I’m guessing he wants to do both though. Because that’s what he does with Tesla cars.
Is it not open vpn with a custom skin? Haven’t heard of Zyxel yet, but most corporate VPNs that I see these days are just open vpn with a skin on them.
You want to do this on a specific machine and not across your network? QoS rules are usually applied at a router or managed switch. I’ve done something like this for troubleshooting a specific network condition with a local proxy before, but never for everything running on a machine.
People make microservices way too small sometimes. Then you have the opposite problem with people trying to cram everything into one system. You need to recognize when some functions are related and should go together, or when something has a weird dependency and should just be separate.
The Stanley Parable, the whole game.
It feels weird to me to invest in a distro that focuses on just one CPU manufacturer for a laptop. If I was trying to hyper-optimize a server then it makes sense. But what if you get very used to how this works and then switch to an AMD laptop in a couple years? Or maybe ARM becomes the next big thing?
For most “enthusiast” boards, you can update the uefi/bios without an OS. I’ve even seen some that will do it without needing to use the CPU, so that you can update to support a newer (currently unsupported) processor.
I’d suggest Intel for networking and an AMD graphics card if you want things to work out if the box.
I guess you could run guacamole for this? It would be a full rdp session then. https://guacamole.apache.org/
If you can find one that isn’t a weird sex cult, let me know.
Yeah I don’t think I’ve had a single crash with the mesa drivers after my overclock was dialed in. And I’ve ran some pretty janky stuff (like my vega 56 that was flashed with a 64 bios).
The only question I have is: how well will it work on linux?
And I’m sure the investigation will reveal no foul play.
It was a joke but no, I don’t trust a news organization owned by Jeff Bezos.
If you take the quiz it all you don’t get a 100%. That’s the real test.
The is a setting in steam to allow that to happen in the background.
I think this depends on the GPU and drivers, I know some professional/enterprise ones can be divided among multiple VMs and a host. I haven’t had to deal with this because it seems like a headache to try. And everything I use works on Linux anyway.
This incident has made me reevaluate some things. I could see this being a one off thing. Like an inventory error or a communication error. But the rebuttal was wild. Cancelled my floatplane subscription for now. Maybe they’ll turn it around down the road, but this one was a big mess up.
If you depend on a piece of software for your career, you shouldn’t try to force it to work on another OS or some hardware it doesn’t have support for. Just run Windows.
You could try using a Windows VM, or even doing GPU passthrough. But do you really want to troubleshoot that for 2 days when an update breaks everything?
I’m amazed at how many professionals use Macs because Apple seems to hate power users. I had to use a Mac briefly recently and was amazed to find they still don’t have window snapping.
It also had no idea what to do with my monitor, couldn’t even detect the correct resolution. I’m guessing if I had bought a $3000 Apple monitor it would have worked immediately. But had to dive into “advanced settings” just to set the correct resolution.