Born too late to watch the collapse of the Russian empire, born too early to watch the collapse of the Russian empire, born just in time to watch the collapse of the Russian empire.
Born too late to watch the collapse of the Russian empire, born too early to watch the collapse of the Russian empire, born just in time to watch the collapse of the Russian empire.
Nobody went and flipped the breaker for the jacuzzi? People like that obviously need practice dealing with inconveniences.
The devs have been working hard to hammer out those troublesome edge cases. There’s a lot less of them than there was a year or two ago.
IIRC Nvidia needs explicit sync support to work reliably. It’s fairly new and might not have landed in some distros, especially the stable releases.
Russia’s actual nuclear policy has been “fire nukes if Putin says so” for decades. This paperwork doesn’t represent a real change.
No, it’s the opposite - they’re saying that this isn’t a change in Russia’s behaviour.
IPv6 has privacy addresses, though. Stuff on my network generates a new random address every day and uses that address for outgoing connections, so you can’t really track individual devices inside my network.
IPv6 has a policy of throwing more address space at stuff to make routing simpler, though.
IPv4 will individually route tiny slices of address space all over the world, IPv6 just assigns a massive chunk of space in the first place and calls it a day.
Meanwhile, ublock origin continues to be free.
I mean, it was probably dinner time. No grand conspiracy behind that one.
If you still have your job, you can start on Factorio mods.
Mate, you’re agreeing with him. He’s saying lots of drivers are terrible.
As a large language model, I don’t have an opinion on this subject.
Well, for starters, unless you’re running a quite old card you should be using amdgpu, not radeon. You seem to have them both loaded.
Post a dmesg?
People are playing it on Steam Deck. Handhelds might not be viable for high end raiding, but there’s a lot more to the game than that.
If you show a geoscientist a picture of a rock, does he still lick it?
The batteries are there but you also need the expensive bidirectional chargers, software and hardware support in the vehicle, and you need the grid at some random school to be able to cope with tens or hundreds of kilowatts of feed-in power. There’s quite a lot involved in connecting a vehicle’s battery to the grid.
This setup only makes sense as long as batteries are expensive, and that won’t be the case for very long. The logistics of grid storage are much simpler when you don’t have the vehicle or chargers to deal with and can connect straight to a high voltage line.
That’s because you can only use them as grid storage when they’re sitting plugged in and you need infrastructure to make feeding all that power into the grid possible.
If you’re going to all that effort for storage that’s only functioning part of the time, it probably makes more sense to buy dedicated batteries which you can put wherever is convenient for the grid and will be available 100% of the time.
Look on the bright side - in the future those nice inland towns will get to enjoy coastal life too!
It’s just another attempt to slow down renewables by taking up all the funding doing something else. It doesn’t need to be useful or practical, so long as it drains the carbon reduction budget.
See also: the coalition’s nuclear energy policy