

Zoom was so bad, too. It was so unreliable, it was missing basic features, the UI was unfriendly.
They’ve improved on each of these things slightly since then.
But it’s a testament to how bad Skype was that Zoom was found to be preferable.
Zoom was so bad, too. It was so unreliable, it was missing basic features, the UI was unfriendly.
They’ve improved on each of these things slightly since then.
But it’s a testament to how bad Skype was that Zoom was found to be preferable.
Gold rating on protondb
https://www.protondb.com/app/553850
The first trick is knowing that there’s a right package. The second trick is knowing what the right package is.
Package managers are great.
You’ve been hearing about Snaps specifically.
I have a hard time believing anybody wants AI. I mean, AI as it is being sold to them right now.
I keep finding new features. Tabs. Hsplit. Plugins. Authentication prompt at save time if it detects that the user you ran it under doesn’t have permission to write to that file.
And of course keybinds that make a dang lick of sense.
It’s time for you to find Micro. The cycle continues.
I installed Arch on my daily driver because I wanted a challenge.
It’s too dependable, even when updating every other day and installing a bunch of nonsense from the AUR. Where’s my challenge?
recently
Unity and Mir would like a word
I don’t think that’s even true. He just had enough money that he could fail 99 times before succeeding once, and the return from that one was enough that he could fail 999 times before succeeding, and so on.
He just threw money around until enough other people succeeded in big enough ways, and then he claims credit.
I’m leaving this with no edit so you can screenshot it later when they announce Mario Paint 3.
Oh. I think you’re wrong on that last point.
You can now (on June 5th) very easily play most PC games on the Switch 2.
Do you remember Halo Wars?
Do you remember Starcraft 64?
This was a clever cash grab, an attempt to tap into entire genres that just would not have translated otherwise.
OH SHIT I JUST REALIZED MARIO PAINT IS COMING BACK
Sorry! Sorry. Miss bro.
Huh, it’s Russian? That’s to your point about them hiding it I guess.
The Excel part looked flawless, a closer match than I’ve seen, but I didn’t get into any of the advanced features. PowerPoint and Word documents also retained full formatting when opening documents authored in the official platforms.
Why downvotes? OnlyOffice is great.
Ah yes, “co-op mode”
Ah yes, the “extended Berkeley Packet Filter”.
Wikipedia:
eBPF is a technology that can run programs in a privileged context such as the operating system kernel.
Hornet uses a similar signature verification scheme similar to that of kernel modules. A pkcs#7 signature is appended to the end of an executable file. During an invocation of bpf_prog_load, the signature is fetched from the current task’s executable file. That signature is used to verify the integrity of the bpf instructions and maps which where passed into the kernel. Additionally, Hornet implicitly trusts any programs which where loaded from inside kernel rather than userspace, which allows BPF_PRELOAD programs along with outputs for BPF_SYSCALL programs to run.
So this is to make kernel-level instructions from userspace (something that’s already happening) more secure.
The thread linked by the OP is Jarkko Sakkinen (kernel maintainer) seemingly saying “show your work, your patch is full of nonsense” in a patch submitted for review to the Linux kernel.
Edit: the OP has edited the link, it used to point to this comment in the mailing list chain.
ok fair