If your goal is to interrupt her usage to avoid excessive usage, would a pomodoro timer help?
I dunno if that can be setup to force lock the screen or something, but maybe its helpful? Depends if its easy to override?
If your goal is to interrupt her usage to avoid excessive usage, would a pomodoro timer help?
I dunno if that can be setup to force lock the screen or something, but maybe its helpful? Depends if its easy to override?
touch
😏
Sway-wm used to be spawnable as a child window, not sure if that is still possible.
I think you should also be able to get multiple ctrl-alt-fX graphical sessions.
I’ll come back and update this comment when I get to my PC and give this a try.
Edit: seem Max-P’s comment.
Not sure what the exact law is, but there are noise restrictions after 10pm in my area. So not just domestics, lawnmowers, reving car engines, drumkits etc are all prohibited. Its at the polices discretion to how they handle it, whenever I have called it in, usually the cops tell them to be quiet, and that theyll swing by a bit later to make sure its peaceful.
I’d call the cops on the noise alone. Its their job to decide whether to, and how to intervene. Of course, the police in my country aren’t trigger happy morons, so that does change it a bit.
I kinda like the keyboard shortcuts for i3/sway, but wish there was some level of mouse integration/polish like gnome. Will try forge, thanks!
Tegra was used in android tablets, I had a couple. Not sure what the licence status was, but it was supported in cyanogen, so they must have had to make some changes to the kernel for that?
Certainly some of the stuff the upstreamed was to support their drivers, but they would have also been working on other more general things to support their super computers and other HPC stuff.
They also had a chipset for intel motherboards (which I can’t find anything about), which may have had some work required?
I don’t really know exactly the scope of all the work, but they have been in the top 20 companies for kernel development for a long time, and I assuming it can’t just be supporting their own drivers.
Its hard to find the stats, but from here: https://bootlin.com/community/contributions/kernel-contributions/ you can click through and get breakdowns per kernel release: https://web.archive.org/web/20160803012713/remword.com/kps_result/3.8_whole.html
My memory is fuzzy, but they have had their tegra SOC since the 2000s, and somewhat more recently they have been a big player in data center networking.
And ever since CUDA became a thing they have been a big name in HPC and super computers, which is usually Linux based.
So they have done a lot of behind the scenes Linux work (and possibly BSD?).
Nvidia have been big kernel contributers for a long time, even before the “fuck you nvidia” thing. They hold their graphics driver close to their chest, but have done a lot of other work for the kernel.
Very weird. Maybe its the client. Can’t see it in the browser either
Ah, I see whats happened, you didnt put anything in the square brackets:
[](https://www.freecodecamp.org/news/shell-scripting-crash-course-how-to-write-bash-scripts-in-linux/)
should be:
[Cool Tutorial](https://www.freecodecamp.org/news/shell-scripting-crash-course-how-to-write-bash-scripts-in-linux/)
resulting in:
Psst, you link has gone missing
AMD were already using the x86 ISA long before amd64.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/AMD
Intel had introduced the first x86 microprocessors in 1978.[51] In 1981, IBM created its PC, and wanted Intel’s x86 processors, but only under the condition that Intel also provide a second-source manufacturer for its patented x86 microprocessors.[12] Intel and AMD entered into a 10-year technology exchange agreement
AMD were also second source for some other Intel logic chips before that deal.
The militarys goal isn’t to make money, its to maintain their tactical edge. And they are up against relentless competition, so they must continuously innovate or lose their advantage.
It’s not so much that the army dudes are buying the tech once its developed, they often ARE developing it. And if its giving them an advantage, they will obviously want to hold that as long as possible.
Well that’s something :D I’m out of ideas, good luck. Might just be easier to reinstall.
If anyone comes across this, you can just press ESC at the Tianocore/bios startup and just disable secure boot!
?? Worth a try? I’m out of ideas though
Is your qemu using bios or uefi? You cant switch between them without something like that happening.
Bottom of that article, there are commands to run from windows and Linux to detect it. Probably easier than messing with the firmware.
From a reddit comment, so could be lies:
yes…here’s an excerpt from the story…
“An Electrician ended up with stars in his eyes after being zapped by 14,000 volts during a serious accident at work. The 42 year-old man from California developed the eye disease cataracts after the high voltage current surged through his body. His shoulder touched a live wire and the current passed through his entire body - including the optic nerve, which connects the eye to the brain. The effect was two bizarre star-shaped electrical burns in his eyes, according to The New England Journal of Medicine. Dr Bobby Korn, an associate professor of clinical ophthalmology at the University of California, San Diego, treated the unnamed patient. Dr Korn told NBC News: “The extreme current and voltage that passed through this important natural wire caused damage to the optic nerve itself.” Cataracts is clouding on the lens inside the eye which leads to limited vision and the most common cause of blindness. The electrician’s story was published in the January issue of the journal. The accident happened 10 years ago and the patient still has poor vision in both of his eyes.”
To go through that with only “poor vision”, pretty damn lucky
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