

It’s just an euphemism, “DRM / License check” = “disease”.
It’s just an euphemism, “DRM / License check” = “disease”.
Nice list, TIL about Ctrl+U
and Ctrl+Y
.
If I may add, Ctrl+X
into Ctrl+E
opens $EDITOR
to edit the current line.
I believe, these are Emacs shortcuts. There’s also set -o vi
in bash, but I’ve never used it, so can’t vouch for it.
Making an assumption regarding the entirety of a social network with at least tens of thousands of users based on a single inflammatory comment (mind you, a comment that has more downvotes than upvotes)? That’s a bit of a small sample to extrapolate from, don’t you think? You should’ve probably asked ChatGPT if that’s the right call.
How do Sam Conman’s Altman’s boots taste?
Open source doesn’t just mean access to the source code.
Literally the first sentence on the linked page.
MIT, also known as “corporations, please make use of my free labour”.
Who needs a GUI for that?
I do. It takes less time and is less error-prone to commit code, especially when you need partial staging, via a decent GUI.
Is it true though? As far as I’m aware the issue is that Windows 11 requires a TPM.
I don’t have a matrix of CPUs that have built-in TPM at hand, but I’m fairly certain that Intel’s 9th gen, released in 2018, has it. It’s disabled by default and needs to be enabled in BIOS, they call it PTT (Platform Trust Technology).
AMD CPUs also have it, under the name fTPM, I think.
If your CPU doesn’t have a built-in TPM, I guess you could buy a discrete chip, rather than get a whole new machine. Though do check that the mobo has a slot.
As you may have noticed, I’m assuming desktop systems. That’s because laptops have had TPMs since forever.