Fun fact: these forced arbitration clauses can backfire spectacularly
Any lawyer who wants to make a shit load of money fucking over a company engaging in these kinds of abusive business practices should look at what Bucher law firm did to Valve.
Fun fact: these forced arbitration clauses can backfire spectacularly
Any lawyer who wants to make a shit load of money fucking over a company engaging in these kinds of abusive business practices should look at what Bucher law firm did to Valve.
sieze(worker, ObjectFactory.meansOfProduction);
On the one hand, I like that it's focused on the broader concept of trust instead of trying to be some kind of AI slop detector. Focusing specifically on AI invites obnoxious debates from the braindead AI bros, so this might make it easier to get adopted by avoiding politics altogether.
... But on the other hand, I could see this going horribly wrong and being abused to bully people. If it becomes common practice to inherit a vouch list from OSS projects, then upstream maintainers essentially become Reddit moderators; Omnipotent grease lords with the power to make anyone's life hell with a single commit.
A "distro" is basically just:
Idk anything about Poseidon but,
is it easy enough to replicate just by downloading the relevant packages?
The answer to that is yes. Just pick a base you like (eg debian, fedora, ubuntu, ...) and install the software you need. You could automate it with some simple scripts, or be fancy and write a Butane config to preconfigure a base Fedora CoreOS image. IIRC, the Omarchy distro is just the former, not even a proper "distro".
If you want to create your own "proper" distro that other people will want to use, there's a lot more that goes into it: updates, builds, tests, deployment, patch sets (because you'll inevitably need to patch various components for compatibility), bug reports, some kind of governance structure...
It's a whole software development thing. If you just need a customized platform for your buddies/workplace, customizing an existing distro is the only reasonable choice. I'd suggest looking into bootc and ublue if you need more than a simple post-install shell script.
I know nothing about what it takes to develop a laptop. Are these issues (BIOS updates, virtualization support, USB4 support, etc) something the laptop manufacturer needs to develop solutions for in-house? Wouldn't that be the job of Qualcomm? Or are Tuxedo saying that these things aren't supported on the Linux side yet? Qualcomm claimed to be contributing to the kernel last year, so idk if that just hasn't happened yet or if they just lied.
Either way this is disappointing, but understandable. There's no sense in working to release a laptop with previous-gen hardware that's not going to be competitive.
You can't spell "INCEL" without "C"
TIL about bat! Looks awesome!
As someone trying to gain weight, I'd love me some 2500 calorie potato chips
Nothing can save this tiny laptop from 2010.
2010 comes for us all.
Not sure if you're being sarcastic or not, but the point of this is to reduce overhead associated with virtualization (aka VMs). Few workloads are able to take advantage of the massive compute resources that a single beefy machine has, so partitioning it is the most efficient use of resources, especially in data centers where maximizing efficiency is important.
Wtf is this article? Its a dox and hitpiece against a random dude because he submitted a PR you don't like? This is psychopath behavior. You don't publish something like this unless you're hoping something bad happens to them.
If this guy didn't submit that PR, somebody else would have done it.
Grow up.