Yep, probably not. I’d prefer AI so much to our CEOs.
Long live Gaben.
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Yep, probably not. I’d prefer AI so much to our CEOs.
Long live Gaben.
Maybe he can pass it to an AI configured to uphold his ideals from beyond the grave?
I wonder how it feels putting all this work into these protections only for your game to get cracked anyway.
It’s almost like this strategy doesn’t actually work.
There can be a pretty significant price discrepancy between digital and physical copies.
2nd: almost every low-end laptop I used has a module that can be pulled off of the main board to remove wireless features.
I think users who know what a NAS is probably know that information already. But true, yes!
It doesn’t just benefit you. You’re benefiting the current users of that spectrum that for one reason or another might not be able to switch.
I suspect most users though couldn’t tell you what frequency their network uses let alone the devices on it.
Ensuring that the system complies with industry standards and integrating security measures for cross-technology communication are also necessary steps, Gao adds.
This is absolutely a huge factor that could make or break the technology if they don’t do this perfectly. This could be the single most important part of the tech.
2.4 GHz is super saturated. The last thing we need is long range i.e. large footprint signals in already saturated spectrum. How this technology is deployed should either be not at all, or very carefully, to prevent widespread interference with existing WiFi devices. This spectrum is already on the verge of being complete trash. Please please do not be deploying more stuff on 2.4 spanning an entire “smart city.”
Username related. Don’t wait until the last minute.
One should not be able to waive one’s rights.
Can we please stop with the privitization? It’s absolutely not been working out very well for the people.
I thought I was told just a year or two ago it was supposed to be the future of manufacturing.
This again! Are you trying to program this image into my long term memory?
Is this related to the ermm convention going on right now in Orlando?
That’s a tough nut to crack. Even as a video game platform, they don’t write most of the software that they sell today. They would need to find some way to convince developers to write software for something that’s not the platform nearly all users are running.
I’m not sure that Microsoft ever did halt going down that path. My wife recently bought a PC that came locked down by default and required some fiddling to allow running unsigned apps. This was Windows 10, not sure about 11.
I think it could be more that broad compatibility with everything is their main selling point, and by doing so they were undermining their own ecosystem.
However, this is mere speculation on my part.
Valve is a Titan doing incredible work for the open source community and making money while doing so.
Successful open source software business model at work. Way to go.
Anything to not reduce consumption.
The most reliable way I know is to seek documentation for the board. It’s up there with PCI lanes in that the board designer will know what has been configured to work with that physical connector. This kind of info is definitely part of your motherboard documentation.
I’m not familiar with dmidecode
so unfortunately I cannot comment on that.
EA? Don’t play!