

Yeah, but you’ll likely never buy it considering how little HBM2 was used in consumer applications. I assume we’ll know a price when the other memory makers join in and compete
Yeah, but you’ll likely never buy it considering how little HBM2 was used in consumer applications. I assume we’ll know a price when the other memory makers join in and compete
They are for servers, if you could afford it Micron would already have contacted you.
Probably easier to switch out for debugging or to flash a SSD from a PC.
No real alternatives in that form factor.
The US government doesn’t (to my knowledge at least) have copyright protections so MIT wouldn’t be possible. BSD 0-Clause is just better because e.g. Austria doesn’t allow you to cede copyright to the public domain and CC0 directly mentions the public domain in the terms of the license.
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It’s licensed under CC0 to anyone wondering. BSD 0-Clause would probably be better but still fantastic.
Because of the way those captions are stored VLC has to use OCR to convert the .SRT file (which basically stores low resolution b/w images I assume to easier allow for different alphabets) to normal text. I don’t know why the open source solutions are so bad at this (especially considering how good the proprietary solutions seem to be) but I had similar problems ripping a DVD. I would assume that had he turned off the special font VLC uses for the subtitles and instead just seen the raw data there wouldn’t have been a problem. Why VLC doesn’t enable this by default (/ have this) I don’t know.
Depends on what software. Anything that happens in the browser works. A lot of other software can be run using Wine. There is some software which still has problems especially when using USB ports as serial ports etc. and a lot of subpar software (un)fortunately just doesn’t work because of it being badly programmed.
https://www.fedoraproject.org/ https://linuxmint.com/ https://archlinux.org/ https://www.debian.org/ https://elementary.io/ https://system76.com/pop/
There are many safe open source options. If you need help there are ample resources available. If you want to you can also DM me.
Yes, stuck. There are enourmous problems with different institutions having to use ancient PCs because the software doesn’t work on modern ones, be they electron microscopes, hospitals or industrial machinery, causing e.g. enourmous security issues. This is one of the most important reasons why FOSS and why making FOSS software mandatory in government contracts is so important.
Also how come people can’t read the fucking article before commenting?
I’m sorry but “Germ-theory sceptic” is damaging enough considering the last one should have died in the 1800’s.
This particular device can emulate multiple systems using FPGA, the one before then could only dp Z80.
My guess as to why they used an FPGA for the Z80 is that development was cheaper since they could just flash new software if there’s an error. Additionally they gained experience for this project.
With this I could imagine GPU emulation etc. happening on the FPGA maybe even bwing able to configure a sound card in software.
I had similar problems on Gnome (ArchLinux) which were fixed with a GPU driver change. Apparently the proprietary AMD drivers required for GPU Video encoding are somewhat janky.
Software emulation is generally inferior to FPGAs because of inaccuracies. Also at that point you could just use your own laptop.
Have fun with your back problems!
And now that I have made the post I got some search results:
If you want to share anything about MIPS though please feel free to comment, I would interest me greatly what the rest of you have to say.
It would make sense that they don’t want to get sued following the recent controversy. Might also be aimed at undermining the AI slop (that Google doesn’t profit from)