153 binaries? where?
153 binaries? where?
That is true, but also nobody is doing it. Just like nobody is verifying Signal’s “reproducible builds”.
because search engines exist
Several solutions have already been posted in here, please do not try to act authoritative when you don’t know the answer. We already saw you asked what VNC is.
People hate being told to use magnetic tape
Because there are still horror stories of them falling apart and not lasting even in proper controlled conditions
just be aware that there’s only one user and it’s root
curious what people are asking and where you are when this happens? I would be shocked if I was just walking around my local grocery store and someone has any clue what Haiku is.
well yea, if it’s free you’re the product
oracle has perpetual free tier VMs, just selfhost it
Agreed, and it is a tragedy that this requires snapd.
$700 for an N100 tablet? Yikes. I can’t imagine they would sell enough to stay in business.
FFI, bindgen/cbindgen, cxx/autocxx, zngr, cpp crate, diplomat, crubit
I thought Rust already had several different methods for interacting with C++? I’m not sure what actual roadblocks there are to developing KDE apps with it?
So blown out of proportion. Nobody is saying to stop using them. The report is more of a state of the union on software in secure systems and the talking points hinge on the most common type of vulnerability seen in large scale attacks: memory safety.
The report (which apparently barely anyone is reading) mentions C/C++ aren’t memory safe (truth) and with specific respect to space flight, alternatives such as Rust haven’t been proven yet. Both languages meet other important criteria (again specific to space flight) but it then immediately states afterwards that until other languages can be qualified, other means of ensuring memory safety are recommended such as hardware. The report makes other mentions. It’s a good read but is not a directive like media is making it.
We know… but people do not all use the same definition of that word.
What do you mean by “isn’t an issue”? You still need a dedicated GPU for the VM.
There are indeed many applications and games that still don’t run under wine for all different kinds of reasons. And the windows-on-linux virtualized GPU solutions for VMs are still not mature enough to work for many apps, so unfortunately for those people, their only choice is a physical GPU passthrough VM.
Why do you think that?
LOL so it’s completely made up then, as I thought.
What I do is use the “Arch Linux Archive” repo and set it to a specific date, which has a snapshot of all the packages from that time. That way I don’t have to update all the time but can still install packages whenever I want. When I feel like updating then I just increase the date in the mirror URL. In pacman.conf you would set it like so:
Server=https://archive.archlinux.org/repos/2024/08/30/$repo/os/$arch