The purpose of a company is to make money.
By selling out they stand to make even more money.
The purpose of a company is to make money.
By selling out they stand to make even more money.
Sure there is: Don't store everything in a database.
AI acceleration ASICs are already in a lot of hardware these days. It doesn't take a whole lot anymore for it to be both cheap and feasible.
It would be pretty easy to test, too.
Get a pre-paid phone. Set up a brand-new Google or Apple account. Activate phone using the new account. Put it through its paces for a few hours and note the ads you get.
Shoot the shit with your friends and family with the phone on the table for a few hours.
Put the phone through its paces again and note the ads you get.
It would surprise not a bit to find that she went specifically to cause trouble, and not because she was a fan.
As for Filmation, now I have to read up on their history, you've got me curious.
It's not like any of us will ever be able to afford products made with those advances.
Bullshit. They didn't want to do that in the first place but did because they felt they had to. Now they have an excuse to not bother anymore.
For starts, read the wiki. Specifically, read the installation guide at least twice to get a feel for how it works and what the Arch vibe is like. This is also your chance to figure out just what you want to do. Do you want to use GRUB or UEFI? Which sounds like a better fit? What filesystem? What do you want to run? mdadm or not? A little bit of planning and reading is better than reinstalling half a dozen times (ask me how I know...)
Must-have applications? Screen or tmux. SSH. Whatever shell you're comfortable with (bash is how I roll, but you might be a fan of fish).
One of the Muskrat's kits will undoubtedly tell him sooner or later. Then Github'll get a takedown order.
The firmware blobs for that chipset might be in a package you don't have installed. You're running Arch, so install the package upd72020x-fw from the AUR.
I use Mate on my laptop; before that I used Cinnamon.
To be honest, DEs are basically terminal window managers for me. If I didn't need a graphical web browser for everything I do (because that's basically what software is these days - shit you log into from a web browser) I'd probably be using GNU Screen or possibly Twin to manage multiple shells instead.
If the drag-and-drop functionality of modern DEs wasn't so helpful I'd probably still be using twm because I like stuff that does what I need, and otherwise stays out of my way.