That’s the max allowed cable length by the standard, so you can’t have an e.g. 2m long 20Gbps cable.
Somebody will gladly sell you one of course, but no guarantees it’ll work.
made you look
That’s the max allowed cable length by the standard, so you can’t have an e.g. 2m long 20Gbps cable.
Somebody will gladly sell you one of course, but no guarantees it’ll work.


Damn, that’s great, I love it.


If you start with dots in the corners, and end with an “X in a box” you can get up to 10 in the same amount of space.


These days, both Bethesda and Obsidian are owned by Microsoft, though Avellone argues that just because the two companies have the same owner doesn’t mean they’re necessarily going to play nice.
Not sure they have much say in the matter, if MS wants a remaster it’ll happen.


It could also have been going through musth, can cause a 180 in behaviour and make perfectly friendly elephants suddenly extremely aggressive.


The driver crossed onto the wrong side of the road and mounted the footpath, there’s something else going on with them.
Can do it with the compose key if you’re on *nix, and here’s an implementation for Windows.
<compose> + e + ^ = ê, and <compose> + shift + E + " = Ë, etc.


I’ve never used 6rd, but I did use 6to4 for a while (A long time ago) and I got a GUA from that. 6rd closely related to 6to4 so I naïvely expect them to work similarly?
Now I did it all with OpenWRT, but the gist was you set the tunnel information on the WAN side in the webui, and it produced the configuration for the LAN side. Since it’s a tunnel you never actually set any of the v6 details on the actual WAN adapter, outside of routing (i.e. what v4 endpoint do you send stuff to).


I think it’s mostly maintenance issues, the maintainers being employees of the company that originally wrote and donated the driver, so there’s been a backlog of bugs that have sat unfixed.
This new driver on the other hand builds off the preexisting kernel support for NTFS, and the maintainer seems better equipped to respond to bugs in a timely manner.


“I’d like to plead insanity. I think the charge is insane. Anyone who takes it seriously could be such as well.”
“I don’t think I’m insane. I think the law is insane,” Dowling said.
I’m not sure it’ll go well for him, but I wish him luck, and I wish he had a proper lawyer.


Yeah, I bet it’s something to do with a video decoder trying to decode empty data (dropped or corrupted frame, etc.), and the result of that being converted from YCbCr to RGB, it’s too consistent of a failure case.


That’s old school hardware overlays, haven’t really been a thing since XP era Windows.
These days everything is a scene graph with normal texture buffers, and the compositor is responsible for either layering stuff over it or doing direct scanout of that surface.
Ok, but who is making those “open weight” models though? Individuals don’t really have the resources to run these huge scraping operations, so they’re often still corporate releases with fake open source branding.


To me lying implies an intent to deceive, LLMs can’t do that as they have no intentions or understanding of the output they produce.
It’s not lying, because it’s also not telling the truth either, it’s just statistically weighted noise.

I kinda get the average person overestimating the capabilities of an LLM, but technically minded people falling for it did surprise me.
Of course, I really shouldn’t be, the ELIZA effect is old and well documented, I suppose it’s more worrying that it can affect anybody.


Nah, storage is fried.
People always focus on systemd whenever this is posted, but all systemd is saying is that it can’t read the service files when it tries to start something. Earlier on the kernel is complaining about I/O errors as well.


That was Ars Technica.


I bet the actual logo display is a full screen browser too, multiple computers each running chrome just to display ads.
Oh that’s fantastic! Thanks for actually working out the numbers.