Do they (or whatever’s left of them) have a license to x86_64, or is it just x86?
Do they (or whatever’s left of them) have a license to x86_64, or is it just x86?
Is MIPS still around? I know it was used a lot in embedded stuff but last I heard they were shutting down development of new MIPS chips.
Windows now handles 7z files natively too (at least as of the upcoming Windows 11 24H2 version), I’m glad they’ve at least added some legit new features for File Explorer.
Looks like a great set of updates!
I have a water mill do it for me, ain’t got time for that.
I was so excited
Are you implying they list…less than four reasons?
“Wayland” doesn’t support any GPU’s, it’s the job of each GPU driver to support Wayland (and Nvidia’s now does).
Hopefully this will make it in as an update for currently supported kernels, but if not it should be in the upcoming 6.8 release:
Good god, someone who actually read the OP’s question and replied with information respondent to it instead of just shrieking “how dare you not use the distro I like” at them. I was starting to think that was banned around here :)
So many capital letters in that headline, it reads like my grandma trying to figure out texting.
Which model do you have? There’s a known issue affecting the sleep/hibernate for the chipset on the new AMD model on the, I believe AMD has already submitted patches to fix it in the next kernel release though.
You can try hacking support for Widevine DRM into Waydroid using the third party “waydroid_script” tool, but obviously no guarantees: https://github.com/casualsnek/waydroid_script#integrate-widevine-drm-l3
…did I miss something?
Wayland is just a protocol, issues need to be fixed by devs of the apps/toolkits that have still haven’t migrated over unfortunately.
As you already noted Tumbleweed isn’t immutable, but it is generally delightful! It’s the one I’ve always been most comfortable with in terms of Rolling Releases
In many cases you can, but there’s never a guarantee that a given IP address will have reverse DNS records configured for resolve it into. On top of that, if it’s a major site it’s likely hosted behind a content delivery network that may a share a single IP address across thousands or even millions of completely unrelated servers. Cloudflare does some pretty interesting stuff with that approach: https://blog.cloudflare.com/cloudflare-servers-dont-own-ips-anymore/ edit: bad at typing
This makes it so that your ISP doesn’t see the actual name of the server/site you’re communicating with, only the IP address. Without Encrypted Hello they’re able to see both.
That’s what it sounds like to me, but it’s a bit unclear admittedly.