2 HDDs (mirrored zpool), 1 SATA SSD for cache, 32 GB RAM
First read: 120 MB/s
Read while fully cached (obviously in RAM): 4.7 GB/s
2 HDDs (mirrored zpool), 1 SATA SSD for cache, 32 GB RAM
First read: 120 MB/s
Read while fully cached (obviously in RAM): 4.7 GB/s
When someone says they used high quality sources, they don’t mean AI output.
And “might” doesn’t signal a fact.
All of this shows how bad OpenAI reacts to this Open Source project. I don’t blame them… it’s a lot of investments that they are trying to protect.
I just wanted to show off with my knowledge about the American Dialect Society’s Word of the Year 2022.
Stable is for servers, unstable for desktop. It has worked for 20 years. I actually installed two further Debian workstations recently after trying and failing with Kubuntu. So … no, I don’t have this problem.
No idea why busybox is needed. Is this is your emergency boot environment like initramfs? Sometimes it’s nice that Linux boots up and offers an environment to fix stuff while some modules are broken.
Maybe finding the (n!)²th prime?
Is she really Christian? Because she violated at least three commandments in one sentence.
We probably live in two different worlds. Here most people buy food and cook themselves.
And fast food is also well known as the worst option you could choose here. It’s bad quality food. In McD it’s white bread with weird undefinable meat and almost no vegatables. If you want to have cheese, you pay extra. I don’t even know what they use for it.
Making pizza is btw 2 minutes mixing, 1h waiting, 10 minutes preparing and 15 minutes baking.
The only fast food that is probably worth to buy is maybe kebab.
Ffs make your own burger. It takes a few minutes. Toast a sesam roll. Fry some meat with salt and pepper with cheese on top. Cut an onion, tomato and add some mayonnaise.
That’s all. It’s more tasty than those horrible McD burgers. And at least you know what you put inside.
I still don’t really know what you mean. How a document looks like depends on you. I’ve got very many fonts available, much more than average Microsoft Office user has. And it’s easier to use LibreOffice from my point of view, because it emphasizes structure. It looks much cleaner by default than MS Word. The only thing MS Word is better in is typesetting. LibreOffice simply fails to place letters properly.
Documents produced by office suites are not really good for publications. They are very annoying to handle, no matter if it’s MS Office or Libre. The cheapest option to have something professional is LaTeX.
I don’t understand why ODT is complicated. It’s a zipfile with inspectible data. The standard document is also not as vendor-specific as MS OOXML which is thousands of pages that everybody gave up upon.
It’s because it’s not the native format. How does MS Office show/edit ODT documents? Does it work better?
You don’t want it until something fails. SystemD often doesn’t let you log in to fix it. It just shows a “infinitely bouncing asterisk” and hopes it will magically get better.
I had numerous situations where systemd didn’t let me abort a hanging service startup during boot or stop during shutdown.
So what do I do now, systemd? Wait till infinity??
That never happened while using other init systems. Because they simply fail properly (“sorry I did my best to stop this, I needed a SIGKILL finally”). Or simply let me log in: “sorry, some services failed to start and now it’s a huge mess, but at least you can log in and fix it.”.
You forgot: use as many dependencies as you need. For example, my init system does not use xz-utils
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The best was the discounted membership. UK paid less than Italy. Populists have easy way with fools.
Don’t worry. EU institutions without all the countries gave more than USA to Ukraine. If you additionally consider the small EU countries, it’s also a lot. So don’t worry. EU gives enormous support, even though USA is the largest donor as a single country.
The article is about positive discrimination. The so-called critics fear that there is room for additional fees for for enhanced services, even the FCC clearly says that services should not be degraded and treated equally.
When FCC says that they never banned all prioritisation every “critic” is in state of alert. They ignore the fact that internet needs kinds of regulations to work properly on technical level and conflate the statement with the one above. FCC probably allows technical measures to regulate important cases of traffic shaping and even blocking when it’s harmful for the service overall. This implies the fact that net neutrality can be guaranteed with these regulations.
Maybe they mean low latency internet connections. This might need some better hardware installations on the side of the provider. This is probably not about net neutrality.
Where is IT and technology?