

Oh really, I think you and my Debian server with >10 years of uptime should have a conversation.
Oh really, I think you and my Debian server with >10 years of uptime should have a conversation.
Hey it’s me, your cousin…
TL;DR:
“Stop advocating for things you care about, it’ll never happen. Fuck your passions and your want to share them with people.”
That’s how you sound.
Just download more.
The point where I was using my master’s in computer engineering to design physical chips? You know, using my fundamental understanding of electricity, magnetism, and the physics that come along with it.
…Blake Henderson?
While I love the thought, I’m not going to hold my breath on replacing my 880 TB of spinning platters with SSDs.
Fuck yeah! Go science!
Why would they have to open source anything? Just because it’s running on Linux doesn’t mean it’s OSS or even F(L)OSS. Steam isn’t open source either.
Coincidentally, in addition to having a BS in EE and an MS in CompE, I was a senior engineer working on battery control systems for three seasons with a Formula E team in my previous job.
At no point did I ever even hint to being an engineer, my man
and
If you aren’t an engineer working with ev batteries or othe rechargeablebatteries, your opinion has no weight.
You’re right, I’m not stupid which is precisely why I haven’t “chimed in” on your unqualified opinions.
I didn’t propose a solution. I simply corrected wrong information presented by the other user. Trees sequester carbon, even if with volatility, as explained in the links.
I agree, it’s not a solution.
Uhhh, I think you’re confused on what carbon sequestration is.
There are some lovely tools that allow kernel updates sans reboot.