Those things were used either because they had inherent value (gold, seashells, gems) or they were just hard enough to make for the average person (glass beads, coinage).
Those things were used either because they had inherent value (gold, seashells, gems) or they were just hard enough to make for the average person (glass beads, coinage).
Define mainframe, because modern mainframes are just sets of regular rack servers (or rack form factor chassis servers). If you mean the old ones then yes, because they’re far less power efficient.
So it’s just a significantly more complicated and expensive coin.
Install an RSS reader and add the feeds from sites you want to follow.
Most people like feeder: https://f-droid.org/packages/com.nononsenseapps.feeder/
File a bug report.
Yes, but none of the toys (or few, and not the big ones) are his. The GPL means the rest of the community could fork Linux from its current state and continue without him.
And he doesn’t really do that much these days anyway. He tries to be hands off as much as possible, because Linux is much bigger than just him, and he won’t be around forever. The biggest thing he personally owns is the Linux trademark. (Not sure how involved he is in the Linux foundation day to day.)
This is what I would recommend. LineageOS is great.
But if you’re aiming for 100% open source, you should account for stuff like radio firmware. You’ll have to look at Pinephone or Fairphone. Android contains a lot of binary blobs.
And your distro may or may not configure it any particular way. OP would need to specify.
Does it need to use the remote? I have a Chromecast (the casting device, not the app running device) and I use the Jellyfin app on my phone and I cast to the Chromecast. Works fine for me.
Oh they’re selling VMware? Because them buying it was the controversial part that spurred people to migrate. Everything else was expected.
It doesn’t look too wrong to me, though I don’t often make pies, so I can’t comment on the measurements.
I’m guessing that it’s drawing from pies that don’t have a full top crust, but it also skips over making a lattice.
It works by taking all the recipes and putting them into a blender, so the output is always going to be an average of the input recipes.
Ask it how many Rs there are in the word strawberry.
Or have it write some code and see if it invents libraries that don’t exist.
Or ask it a legal question and see if it invents a court case that doesn’t exist.
It’s possible to damage hardware, but unlikely. In some cases, driving a CRT out of range could damage it. Some line printers could catch fire if used improperly. But I haven’t heard of anything like that in consumer hardware in decades.
The S in USB is serial.
But OP didn’t provide much detail on the device, hardware, software, or communication method. A VM is probably easier.
Yup. Even on your LAN, between devices you’re almost certainly going to be limited by disk speed. The real use case is in the enterprise, where you’ve got dozens or hundreds of users, and their traffic adds up.
Or just RTFM first and learn without breaking stuff.
You should set it back to whatever it was. It shows 5.6 GB in active use and 19 GB used for cache. You’re already using all your RAM, just not actively. You don’t sit on 100% of the chairs in your house at once either. 3 GB swap used is very low usage, which is expected when you’re not actively using a lot of memory.
Don’t mess with things you don’t understand, especially when you don’t have an actual problem. You’re going to end up breaking things. (Which, to be fair, is one way to learn, but at the cost of breakage.)
Broadcom doesn’t care. They exploit the lag time for very large companies to switch. In that time, they can set prices as high as they want, because the company won’t go without licenses or support.
A quick Google does not produce any results showing an increased device limit.
I’m curious, what are you doing to reach 127 device endpoints, especially on a thin client?