

M1&2 are pretty much fully implemented in Asahi.


M1&2 are pretty much fully implemented in Asahi.


Good thing almost all flavors of Linux run flawlessly on the x86 models.


Is this a bot? These can’t be real responses…


The currently existing infrastructure for standard datacenters with normal capacity for heating and cooling are just fine for basic compute and storage.
All the new outfits builds are being built very specifically for inference compute, which they are only doing because it’s less hassle than retrofitting existing facilities, and they think they can trick/screw taxpayers into footing the bill if new facilities are built.
It’s a scam from top to bottom.


Ban all new datacenters as fast as possible and shut this shit DOWN


LOL, OH NOOOOOO. “Let us absolutely rape your wallet, or else…”


5G was mostly about cramming more connections into the spectrum and expanding broadcast range (as well as some other things), but it wasn’t just about node speed on the network.


If you ever need more reasons to avoid Ubuntu…


Or set fire to delicate fabrics, wallpaper, or other potentially flammable surfaces a mosquito might be near or on.


If you’re this lacking in confidence of your skills, you may have other issues to work out…


Why is there a question mark in the title? We already know the answer.


Stupid ass car. Johnny Ives had like ONE really good design idea, and that was almost 30 years ago at this point.


Y’all, it’s Git.
If you’re so paranoid that literally no PaaS is doing it for you, AND you don’t care about the extra features for community interaction, just push to literally any other machines to keep copies.
If you need the public facing features, and you claim they are all terrible, make your own, or STFU already, my God. It’s all UI on top of git. All those extra features ARE the product.


Looks like YT is out censoring things. I’ll swap the link.


It’s like Odenkirk doing Manson, but it’s real. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z5IrRe2F7qY


It’s not a form factor, it’s an entire package. Modular hardware, expansion, OS, software ecosystem…etc.
What you’re saying is akin to “I have old laptops, so why would I buy a Framework?”
For it’s functionality.
An RPi doesn’t have any of this by default as an SoC, especially the updated wireless modules. This also allows expansion as needed for cheap modules to be connected, so the benefit of upgrades is possible. Sounds like a big win.


Well that engineer is fired.
Just install Asahi or Fedora and get your speed back.