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Yup, the lab could tell a difference!
Awesome!
Yup, the lab could tell a difference!
Awesome!
The amount of heat reflected/absorbed between the two sides is trivially small.
Your particular choice of wording here makes me very curious: Do you mean that there really was a measurable difference (which was trivially small)?
Would it be possible to work around this by using virtual desktops? 🤔
If that’s the case you should update Wiktionary which currently claims that they’re synonyms: https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/resume#Noun
I myself spend a disproportionate amount of my free time debugging open source software (and filing bug reports and patches).
FWIW, this is not normal or expected, most users get their notifications more or less instantaneously. Maybe knowing this might help you search for information about whatever it may be that prevents this from working for you.
The Line messaging app is ridiculously popular in Japan, to the point where people sometimes are genuinely confused by someone trying to explain that they don’t have Line on their phone:
You might find this project interesting:
As already mentioned several times, selfhosting a mail server is not recommended unless you’re particularly interested in hosting a mail server, but with that said, you might find this project interesting:
I’m pretty sure that forgetting and allowing are two very different things.
That seems like a perfectly reasonable thing to do, very different from allowing “notifications and messages to disrupt their sleep”.
Some even allow notifications and messages to disrupt their sleep.
WTF is wrong with people!?
The developer said he forgot that his secret keys were in the repository.
If you have your secret keys in your repository you’ve already fucked up, long before you accidentally make that repository public.
I would really want to have a really good open source SFTP (SSH File Transfer Protocol) app, with good secure key management and excellent transfer performance. So far, I haven’t found any such app.
“These features and experiences need to be trained on information that reflects the diverse cultures and languages of the European communities who will use them.”
No, they do not, these features and experiences don’t need to exist at all.
Yes, it is.
I’ve been running my own mail server for decades now (a quite odd hobby, I know) and that’s not to be recommended for anyone who doesn’t have a particular interest in e-mail. SMTP is from the early 1980s with roots in the 1970s and has had layer upon layer bolted on since then. It’s a fantastic mess.
I would like to suggest that anyone who in the year 2024 insists on you communicating with them by fax can’t be trusted and your best solution is therefore to stay away.
In general, no. Most malware that runs its own process simply uses some name intended to make you not notice it. But it is possible, in Linux just as in every other operating system that ever existed, to imagine that some unusually sophisticated malware manages to exploit some unknown vulnerability to gain full control of the kernel and then all bets are off, then it would be able to do anything.
I like this.