Oh damn, you’re right.
Oh damn, you’re right.
Correction: the iPhone 16 does support physical SIM.
The unstable is named Sid, after the kid next door who liked to blow up toys.
To be fair, the paid version of Davinci comes with the missing codecs. It’s only the free version that people have trouble with x264/x265.
In the US, a lot of Lowes Hardware Stores use Linux on their employee computers. Most movie theater projectors are running CentOS, and most movies that come in on hard drives are formatted to Ext2.
See, here’s the thing about open source, you have the source. You can always compile a discontinued program. You can even update the code if you want. No one can say “You can’t run it anymore”. I can grab Linux Kernel 0.01 and still compile it. No one will stop me. No one!
With proprietary software, there’s always a chance they’ll pull the rug out from under you.
Their static website hosting is probably the best in the business. We seriously need some competition though.
Long time Raspberry Pi user here, the only software I can’t load natively is Steam. What software are you having problem with on the M1?
Admittedly, I bought an Nvidia card for AI. I am part of the problem.
It never went away.
There will be some growing pains, but the x86 compatibility layers are getting surprisingly good. Personally, other than Steam, I don’t have any software this is incompatible with ARM.
After enjoying the very local power of Ollama it seems weird to give OpenAI any money.
No, but you can disable Adobe Acrobat Document Cloud services.
Boot to USB drive and load documents from backup. After my shift is over, I restore or replace the bad drive.
If you want to test out Linux, try running a virtual machine instead. There are a few good free software programs to do this. VirtualBox used to be a good option. It’s a free and harmless way to dive into Linux.
Linux Is Only Free if You Don’t Value Your Time
This one is my favorite.
My co-workers SSD failed, and he was out most of the day. My SSD failed, and I was back up and running in about 10 minutes.
10 years ago when I worked at a movie theater the paper cups ran us about 30¢ each. The soda was about 5¢.
I recommend the flatpak version. It’s still a little buggy as an app, and it’s missing a few features, but it’ll be rad when it’s done.
No car, no problem.