The author has no clue how spending works in cloud environments nor why it's so complicated to calculate. This is a pretty uniformed article.
Rust doesn't prevent memory leaks. You can do that in every language
Can we get those settings for adults too?
All ISPs were required to block Twitter/X. Starlink was the only one that didn't. They didn't charge SpaceX because it belonged to Musk but because they violated the court order.
What happened to the immunity case? Last update says April 25th but that was a month ago.
Straighten it out, then twist it into a spring around a screwdriver. Remove a spring from some component and put the original in my spare parts box.
Ublock origin on Firefox. You'll be shocked at how fast pages will load
Yes, though this is true of a lot of the easier distros.
HD encryption only helps if they get physical access to the disk when the device is locked or powered off. If they get it via a backdoor or virus, then it doesn't help.
Shower pod at the Paris airport was the best layover I've ever had. You pay in 30 minute increments but so nice to get refreshed when you're traveling across the Atlantic.
Says the judge revoked ALL of his business certificates in New York. Trial will continue to assess damages he must pay.
From https://docs.redhat.com/en/documentation/red_hat_enterprise_linux/8/html/managing_monitoring_and_updating_the_kernel/signing-a-kernel-and-modules-for-secure-boot_managing-monitoring-and-updating-the-kernel: "In addition, the signed first-stage boot loader and the signed kernel include embedded Red Hat public keys. These signed executable binaries and embedded keys enable RHEL 8 to install, boot, and run with the Microsoft UEFI Secure Boot Certification Authority keys. These keys are provided by the UEFI firmware on systems that support UEFI Secure Boot."
Basically the Microsoft keys are ones that the firmware vendor (motherboard or chip manufacturer) recognizes as secure by default (via CA validation). You can override them. It's not a Linux issue but a hardware-vendor-defaulting-to-Microsoft issue.