Technically changed two letters. Thats what makes them innovator auteur geniuses.
Technically changed two letters. Thats what makes them innovator auteur geniuses.
The molecular mechanical modeller NAMD and its viewer use TCL as the CLI interface, and it’s…fine. I would prefer BASH or python, but it works just fine.
Also Tk is how most LaTeX drawing is dealt with, so trying to modify, say circuit diagrams or chemical structures drawn directly in LaTeX (I.e. chemfig
) requires using some Tcl. Again, it’s…fine. No huge complaints.
Edit: bad memory, the drawing program in LaTeX is TikZ not TkZ, its unrelated to Tk.
I kinda suspect it won’t show up as a normal HID keyboard, I had some issues with that with a Razer mouse/keyboard, I think they did some proprietary BS to make sure the shortcuts worked for actions that couldn’t be done via keypresses. But I hope it does! It would be cool to see.
Yeahhhhh thats a pretty niche product and is basically a HID driver interface, so any functionality would have to be rebuilt from the ground up on Linux. It’ll certainly take some time, if theres enough interest to make it worthwhile to someone.
I mean both Red Hat and Ubuntu did ship updates to change the config of cups-browsed, so I don’t think that’s correct.
Yeah definitely the latter, but phrasing it as generation is very very wierd. Literally physically impossible.
Oh my god if you are a new user please do not go straight to Arch or Manjaro. By far the two distros most likely to breaky irreparably.
Helium is tiny, and will diffuse though pretty much anything other than continuous welded metal pipe very very quickly. The elastomer seals on a phone would slow it down slightly, but the article’s from 2018, before so many phones were watertight. I remember my old iPhone had a little piezo cooling fan in one of the grates on the bottom, so helium would have no trouble at all.
Can’t speak for MEMS specifically, but it absolutely can make chips shut down whole instruments by changing their properties. It intercalates slower, but has much the same effect once it’s in there.
Yup. Most of the mems devices will essentially shut down the device if they go out of tolerance. This is a pretty common-knowledge fact among folks who work with large magnets, or with helium or hydrogen gas.
Funnily enough, it also happens with equipment microcontrollers which are unlikely to have a MEMS unit in them – for instance, any benchtop centrifuge made after the mid-90s will shut down, and I’m pretty sure those are still on quartz clocks. It also effects things like on-chip thermometers.
Sure thats true as long as the basic support on compatibility is there, but as I understand it Pine is so hardware-only that they make it hard for other projects to even support their hardware, i.e. with lacking drivers as the other comment addressed.
Deeply confused by what the hell this is
I have my steam games running from a NTFS storage partition separate from my Windows and Linux home partitions…
I had some initial issues when I started doing that, and it required a different read method for the drive (which never worked), but for about 6mo I’ve had no issues running steam off a vanilla NTFS drive.
I’m guessing that’s a mini-ITX? Yeah I can forgive a case which is highly optimized for small form factor, but this case is if anything the opposite.
In my experience NTFS is the most stable, unfortunately. What issues are you having with the NTFS disk on linux?
For a $240 case, no review is going to make me want to buy it, but god is it funny to watch Steve’s frustration with it.
And there was me thinking that was a mint problem…but it’s never broken nearly badly enough to force a reinstall. It’s just weird not being able to do a full upgrade unless you temporarily uninstall some packages.
Just switched from Alacritty, kitty+zsh rocks. Feels faster than alacritty, and the tutorialization of the default config is great. And it’s wildly configurable.
Where the heck is the battery pack? The floor in the back seems pretty low, and no space in that tiny hood.
Also, I’m astounded DeJoy is still postmaster general after all this time.
0x129 (plus turning off XMP) was enough to stabilize my 13700KF for now, and hopefully 0x12B will be the final nail in the coffin for continued degradation.
However, polling users here for experiences isnt going to give a good perspective on how the CPUs are actually doing. Until it’s pretty far gone users may not even notice, and the small sample size of folks who’ll reply here is probably not going to accurately reflect the actual state of the CPUs.
Level1techs has done some really good work investigating this at large scale on datacenters, and the takeaway there is that these problems are going to take a while to show, so its generally not a good idea to buy these CPUs til 0x12B has been out for a few months and we know the effects, at which point Arrow Lake will probably be a better option.
tl;dr if you’re going to buy right now, buy AMD 7000, but if you’re willing to wait til February or so, it’ll be a decision between the new gen of Intel CPUs and current AMD CPUs (only 9000 series will probably be available by then).