And this is why f64 exists!
- 28 Posts
- 263 Comments
So that means the brain is simple enough to understand, but we are too simple to understand it.
chevy9294@monero.townto Science Memes@mander.xyz•heard the NYPD is offering $10,000 for any informationEnglish9·5 months agoSo they are searching for owner of the drone or what?
Pixel 7a is more expensive than Pixel 8a???
Yes, primary school is teacher, anything higher is professor.
I know KDE is the most similar to windows but I would never install it due to 2 reasons:
- too many options for them
- too many options for me (the support guy)
Oh, thats why my old samsung phone lasts for a month without usage, but pixel loses 5% per night on airplane.
Nope, I’m not doing that. If they want that, they can do it themselves.
chevy9294@monero.townto Linux@lemmy.ml•Tell one thing that you miss after switching from another OS to Linux.English4·6 months agoI’m 100% sure that Raspberry Pi has that. I can set how much of ram will go for the gpu. But raspberry pi’s gpu isn’t really a gpu.
And not just that, you also have a higher chance to get elected.
Interesting, yet another proof that math is useful!
Much better, thank you :)
This is not less pixels, they are just very compressed.
chevy9294@monero.townto Technology@lemmy.world•Found in the wild: The world’s first unkillable UEFI bootkit for LinuxEnglish1·6 months agoThey are stored behind luks and I think they are readable only by root. But bootkit can probably only infect UEFI from Linux that is running on that machine. And to interact to UEFI you probably have to be root, right?
I’ll look into more options, either store keys on a seperate luks usb key or on a hardware securety key like Nitrokey. For
sbctl
there is already a roadmap feature for hardware security keys, I hope this comes soon :)
chevy9294@monero.townto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Does Google uses Google Chrome users to discover new unindexed pages?English12·6 months ago100% if you have enabled “Safe browsing” (which is enabled by default). This also applies to Firefox, but I don’t know if there is enabled by default.
chevy9294@monero.townto Technology@lemmy.world•Found in the wild: The world’s first unkillable UEFI bootkit for LinuxEnglish5·6 months agoWell… if you have your own keys (like I do) you have to store them somewhere. That somewhere is probably somewhere on a computer where they are used so you can update the kernel. If you have private keys, you can probably bypass secure boot.
Is there a way to have private keys stored on a nitrokey that has to be plugged in for every kernel update?
chevy9294@monero.townto Technology@lemmy.world•ISPs say their “excellent customer service” is why users don’t switch providersEnglish42·6 months agoWe can switch ISP???
chevy9294@monero.townto Fediverse@lemmy.world•Millenials and Zoomers experience decision fatigue differently (And what it means for Lemmy)English7·6 months agoI always open settings on every app or website to see what I can change. This gives me feeling like this is something made just for me and I will use it for longer. Except KDE, this has way too many settings.
Sometimes I see 0 comments on every single post. And I even donated when signing up. A little sad :(