Stuxnet 👀
Stuxnet 👀
How frustrating it may be as an UN peacekeeper. You have deadly weapon, but cannot use it.
Even as a warning: don’t approach us, don’t destroy our vicinity.
Yeah. I hate reading “essays” generated by an AI.
Keep it short for better reader experience.
But how to select “the charger” and “the load”?
How…?
So far it’s a mess.
I still have Micro USB devices, so I need two cables or USB-C→Micro USB adapter.
I have PCs without USB-C ports, so another adapter needed USB-C → USB-A.
But, I can now “dock” my new-ish laptop with only one USB-C ↔ USB-C cable to a monitor.
Monitor gives power.
RIP shrooms, long live shrooms.
More interesting things:
- The “systemd-tmpfiles --purge” option is reworked to only apply to tmpfiles.d/ lines marked with the new “$” flag. This is to better address systemd’s --purge deleting too many files by accident.
- Systemd 258 also aims to remove support for the (deprecated) System V service scripts support.
- systemd-boot menu will now react to volume up/down rocker presses in the same way as arrow up/down presses. This is for smartphones and other devices that may have volume up/down rockers but not arrow keys.
Cumulative cost?
I don’t say that. Rather it’s just a trivia.
Funny thing, it repacks a deb package.
See manifest.
Good days are coming for Intel.
Meanwhile stock prices going down, down, down.
Imagine Google killing the searching feature.
No Mini, Air, SE editions?
No way it will cost $ 69.
See for example PiKVM prices.
Do 7 nm chips are more energy intensive than older 100 nm?
Or it’s just scale, more chips to manufacture, more energy needed.
We went full circle.
KISS-ish. Default init is systemd. Debian also provides customized configuration of services.
Building a deb package isn’t that straightforward as Arch’s PKGBUILD.