Maybe I’m too European to understand your point, but my phone selling my call and message history would be just as outrageous.
Maybe I’m too European to understand your point, but my phone selling my call and message history would be just as outrageous.
Is the user aware that the data they synchronize to their car, a machine that they own, is sold by the car manufacturer to advertisers? Do they explicitly agree to the selling of their data, when selecting what connectivity they want?
Can you blame the user for making a choice, when they’re not told the consequences of that choice?
Sounds a lot like flattening with extra steps to me
It should also be noted that the post will only appear on that kbin instance, and no other instances.
I recently had GCC give me the error “returning to the gate for a mechanical issue”, fun stuff as well
I’m not sure I’d classify it as a bug. Instances can temporarily go down at any moment for numerous reasons, to account for this instances will keep retrying to connect with an exponential backoff. At what point should an instance assume that another instance is permanently gone?
Perhaps a good start would be adding a status indicator to every community with something like last sync: 1 minute ago.
You can see that an instance/community is gone by visiting the instance directly. In this case at https://lemmy.fmhy.ml/c/imaginarymechas (which obviously won’t work now, as it’s gone).
Whenever you submit a post to a community, first your own instance saves the post locally, then sends it to the instance hosting the community, this instance then sends it to any other instance with users subscribed to the community. When the hosting instance is down, then that step of course fails, resulting in the post being only visible to members of your own instance.
Did you reboot your PC after installing? Games often included DirectX redistributables which required a reboot to fully install.
To be fair, the stock image has the telltale signs of being AI generated. Details are warped in a fashion that a photo or human drawing wouldn’t have.
Either way, I don’t get the controversy. Some person broke the Shutterstock anti-AI ToU, and someone at Disney bought the image for their design, possibly not knowing it was AI generated.
Depends on what undefined
we’re talking about. JavaScript undefined is just a value for undefined variables.
In C undefined behavior could be anything, ranging from reading in random garbage to time travel or summoning eldritch terrors.
Mattermost, it might not be the best feature-wise, but it’s open source, and a university can host it’s own server with SSO
This is just an educated guess, but could it possibly mean that it couldn’t create your post?
That’s not entirely true. OverlayFS supports page cache sharing for files in image layers. If your images share the same base image layer, then it should share libc and friends in the page cache.
https://docs.docker.com/storage/storagedriver/overlayfs-driver/#overlayfs-and-docker-performance
Sweet! Now I don’t have to recursively write comments to explain the meaning of each comment
To add on to this, if you’re using some random RAM stick picked out of the gutter, then it might be worth it to run memtest86+. Bad RAM sectors can give some weird unpredictable issues.
Yes, but windows is an entire operating system, with an antivirus included
Still, who pays 419$ for an antivirus?
If it creates infinite number of people, it could solve world hunger with some good ol’ Soylent green thinking. Although you might want to figure out how to slow down the trolley at some point.
It has some good parts, such as the ability to use for loops, and the fact you can kind of avoid using it as much thanks to it’s webassembly support