And If they label the pedal “stop” and it doesn’t actually stop the car?
And If they label the pedal “stop” and it doesn’t actually stop the car?
Does Apple have actual instructions and documentation that explains this? I honestly didn’t know, as I’ve never used iMessage.
Tell that to Fedora that keeps resetting the Firefox homepage back to a Fedora news site.
All true, which is what I meant by “not well” encrypted. It’s technically encrypted, but for all practical purposes it might as well not be.
It IS encrypted. Not well, but it’s encrypted.
I consider “context”, even if not added explicitly by the user, to be part of the input.
Not exactly. The answers would be exactly the same given the exact same inputs if they didn’t intentionally and purposefully inject some random jitter into the algorithm each time specifically to avoid getting the same answer each time
I know how you feel I used to love watching all the SpaceX launches, but I just can’t bring myself to care anymore about anything Musk is involved in.
ICQ died the day they were bought by AOL.
Just be glad it doesn’t have an LLM based AI yet.
Most likely. The documentation says it can change what was a single instruction on the N64 into multiple instructions, so those values will potentially be very different. It will probably close off some exploits, change others, and even introduce new ones.
When you suggested that they should have resigned instead, which causes far less inconvenience to the company.
Is it possible to turn recommendations on? I’m fine with those, but I never want to see shorts again.
I’ve never been able to get GPU acceleration working in qemu/kvm. That’s also why the “just works” aspect of virtual box is important.
I guess that depends on what we are using it for. I use it for CAD / CAM software that only works in Windows (Vectric Aspire). Nothing else has been able to give me 3d previews with any kind of usable performance.
Odd, since in my experience, it’s the most consistently reliable, performant, and easy to setup / use desktop vm package I’ve used. It always seems to “just work” when others don’t
It’s the Windows Defender component. Blocking things that interfere with your computer is literally what it was designed and intended to do.
Read the incoming video signal from an HDMI input, inject and render an ad over top of it (like a lower 3rd banner for example), and display it on your screen.
This sounds like it could display ads over your pirated content.
They are perfectly free to do that. They just have to resubscribe from their new home country at the new rate. Just like with telephone service or cable tv. It’s not like they will get in trouble or would be prevented from moving.