IIRC Mono was mostly used for WASM as it was optimized for smaller builds than the full fat CoreCLR (talking about .NET non-Framework Mono)
IIRC Mono was mostly used for WASM as it was optimized for smaller builds than the full fat CoreCLR (talking about .NET non-Framework Mono)
It really wouldn’t change anything in the long run. Any company that creates a browser is gonna need some form of income and people aren’t willing to pay for a browser. What would be their incentive to continue to work on the browser when they aren’t being paid?
The kernel modules usually are signed with a different key. That key is created at build time and its private key is discarded after the build (and after the modules have been signed) and the kernel uses the public key to validate the modules IIRC. That is how Archlinux enables can somewhat support Secure Boot without the user needing to sign every kernel module or firmware file (it is also the reason why all the kernel packages aren’t reproducible).
And technically you can whitelist other certificates, too, but I have no idea how you might do that.
When you enter the UEFI somewhere there will be a Secure Boot section, there there is usually a way to either disable Secure Boot or to change it into “Setup Mode”. This “Setup Mode” allows enrolling new keys, I don’t know of any programs on Windows that can do it, but sbctl
can do it and the systemd-boot
bootloader both can enroll your own custom keys.
I did hear that one of their newer versions does use eBPF, but I haven’t even remotely looked into it.
I don’t think any of the major distros do it currently (some are working twards it tho), but there are ways (primarily/only one I know is with systemd-boot
). It invokes one of the boot binaries (usually “Unified Kernel Images”) that are marked as “good” or one that still has “tries left” (whichever is newer). A binary that has “tries left” gets that count decremented when the boot is unsuccessful and when it reaches 0 it is marked as “bad” and if it boot successfully it gets marked as “good”.
So this system is basically just requires restarting the system on an unsuccessful boot if it isn’t done already automatically.
I also didn’t expect Lucy, I expected some other FGC character but I am not too too surprised considering they have RWBY in BBTAG
I dunno, I don’t have a camera feed into your life. But considering that is the first thing you respond to a clarification it most certainly wouldn’t surprise me if you did.
I dont think home directory files should handled by something named tmpfiles.
The only reason its still called tmpfiles is because of backwards compatibility
The case is: You switched to it before it was “old-old-stable” and haven’t updated.
Causes for this are likely:
Sometimes (almost always) I wish that the refunded money wouldn’t come out of Steams/Valves pocket…
Just a minor clarification/correction: the “or later” part also depends on the license per se. There is a GPL-3.0-only and a GPL-3.0-or-later. Usually you’ll find something like “or at your option any later version.” if that is the case, but by default you should expect the GPL-3.0-only to apply.
Fun fact: open source has a definition: https://opensource.org/osd
I don’t know much about Grayjay, but how you are describing it, it at best is “source open”
It’s incredibly easy to fuck your partitions to hell and back, especially through Windows.
Fun fact: Windows won’t allow you to delete any EFI partition (that is the only one I know of/tried) unless its through diskpart
with a specific override/force option.
But then again, I somehow nuked my recovery partition by accident at some point as well.
bless the drive with a boot loader that doesn’t suck, like Grub
Ah yes, I need a whole separate OS just to boot my actual OS…
I would in no world call GRUB a bootloader that doesn’t suck.
He is the one that still wanted to make Project Titan work. Overwatch was the crawl, PvE was suppose to be the walk and then they’d have the run with the MMORPG.
https://twitter.com/jasonschreier/status/1771227101112205572
Overwatch
Don’t worry, the person behind Overwatch 2 left in 2021 and is still held in high regard by a lot of people :)
yes