Works great under the nails though
aka @JWBananas@startrek.website aka @JWBananas@lemmy.world aka @JWBananas@kbin.social
Works great under the nails though
This thing costs about the same as one good set of nails
Moving down the stack, Unix systems have never been big on supporting arbitrary drivers: remember that Unix systems were typically coupled to specific machines and vendors. NT, on the other hand, intended to be an OS for “any” machine and was sold by a software company, so supporting drivers written by others was critical. As a result, NT came with the Network Driver Interface Specification (NDIS), an abstraction to support network card drivers with ease. To this day, manufacturer-supplied drivers are just not a thing on Linux, which leads to interesting contraptions like the ndiswrapper, a very popular shim in the early 2000s to be able to reuse Windows drivers for WiFi cards on Linux.
“From The Article”
Besides the fact that present-day battery technology makes this impossible, modern smartphones display a very obvious indicator when apps are using the microphone.
Hotword detection notwithstanding, as that happens at the hardware level.
The two are not mutually exclusive. The downvote button is not an “I don’t like this” button.
They were keeping their promise of 10 years of Lightning ecosystem support. Dropping the old iPod connector was highly controversial.
It makes about as much sense as the typical ones anyway. Or, like, the output to nmap --help
or something.
or my CPU, which kind of doubt
Not a 13-14 gen Intel, per chance?
It reads very “if it ain’t broke, take it apart and fix it”
Can confirm. Happened to a friend within the past month. Theirs wasn’t even on the list of affected models.
Nobody:
Crowdstrike:
Sysadmin here. Wtf are you talking about? All we did was “rapidly fix the issue by disabling Crowdstrike module.” Or really, just the one bad file. We were back online before most people even woke up.
What do you think Crowdstrike can do from their end to stop a boot loop?
It’s a wonder that someone hasn’t implemented a similar wrapper for WDDM. I suppose they’d rather force the vendors to play nicely.