

I’ve seen some waking up but not most.


I’ve seen some waking up but not most.


You forgot to edit the second silicone at the end of your sentence.


In those cases I just do a charge back on my credit card.


You can order those directly from chip suppliers (mouser, digikey, arrow, etc.) for a lower cost than you could get them from framework. Also those are going to be very difficult to solder/desolder. You’re going to need a hot air station, and you need to pre-warm the board to manage the heat sink from the ground planes.


What’s the context here?


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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.


I-4 was much easier to drive for me than I-95 in Miami. I have never seen worse drivers.


You can have a memory leak when items are still in scope in some loop or when you have a reference count cycle. The latter happens with the Rc/Arc types in rust.
An example for the former can be a web server that keeps track of every request it’s ever received in memory. You will eventually run out of memory. But you did not violate any memory rules (dangling pointer, etc.). Memory leaks can be caused by design issues.


You don’t need unsafe. Just keep pushing to a vec and never remove anything. Memory leaks are more than lost memory allocations. You can even have them with rc/arc cycles


Rust doesn’t prevent memory leaks. You can do that in every language


“Voluntarily” in the title makes it seem like it is not appetizing. I find dal delicious, and it’s not my native cuisine.
Yes, though this is true of a lot of the easier distros.


How would you make money as a mastodon instance? Pay to be a member? I don’t see the incentive for the average user to pay when it’s so easy to join a free instance (I’m considering the average person doesn’t know how to host their own).


I was newish to Linux and had just run rm -rf ./.* to remove all the hidden files/dirs in a directory. I then wanted to run rm -rf ./* to clear the rest, but I accidentally ran rm -rf . /*. By the time I noticed it was taking too long and hit Ctrl+C, it was too late.


What IT guys did you go to?


It’s WAY better than batch (not to be confused with bash) scripting. It’s got some really nice features though and lacks a lot of the small paper cuts inherited from legacy shells. Look at nushell for something similar on Linux.
My best experience was in SF on a day it was raining VERY heavily. Waymo blew me away compared to Tesla"a FSD, which would just tell you to take over in rain.