

Seriously wtf did I just try to read? It sounded like AI slop.
Seriously wtf did I just try to read? It sounded like AI slop.
What does Wine have to do with anything…? Wine is an implementation of Windows ABI and APIs, it has nothing to do with Linux’s ability to run 32 bit executables on 64 bit machines. AMD64 CPUs can run x86 instructions. 32 bit executables run natively on Linux, no emulation or VM required. Old (pre arm) versions of MacBooks have hardware that can run 32 bit instructions, but the OS simply doesn’t let you run 32 bit executables anymore without jumping through hoops.
A lot of your comment here makes no sense, tbh it reads like you’ve reached the limit of your understanding. And no we shouldn’t be “making fun of” the Wine team getting paid basically nothing for making an amazing product. Wtf?
Ragu is a general term for meat sauces some of which have tomatoes but not all. The recipe I use I wouldn’t call a “tomato sauce” but it has tomatoes. In the US most ragus are much more tomato forward if that’s your frame of reference.
Neat, that says a lot about the programmer too, although Windows is famous for bending over backwards for backwards compatibility.
Hmm the type of thinking that implies Linux users only say bad things about Apple because they don’t know what they’re talking about? :)
You can 100% run 32 bit binaries on Linux systems so the answer is all of them. The need for libraries isn’t the same as the complete inability to do so, any program with dependencies of course needs them and they of course have to be compatible. Hell with binfmt_misc
you can even run arm32/aarch64 binaries, but that’s not fair I guess since it’ll be transparent qemu emulation, although still pretty cool.
Also my view of this meme isn’t that it’s implying that there are no issues, just that it doesn’t force things on you or stop you from doing things which is generally true.
I’m pretty sure the meme is factually correct: you can’t run 32 bit applications on current versions of macOS. Unless something has changed recently that I don’t know of. Doesn’t iOS also force updating apps? I have a vague memory of my partner not being able to use an “old” version of an app and also not being able to update it so they simply couldn’t use it. That could be on the app developer though. Both of those a relevant to “old apps”.
If the meme is referring only to arm64 then eh I guess it’s a bit of a stretch but whatever, it’s a meme.
I agree there are many more, and much more annoying, criticisms though.
An equal amount of wasted energy is output defending a trillion dollar corporation that doesn’t care about those defending them at all. Apple be fine. Let’s just use our computers and move on with our lives; it doesn’t have to be personal.
This is kinda funny, and I know the concept of “authentic” isn’t particularly easy to nail down, but my experience is that Italian lasagna doesn’t have tomato sauce. It’s always been thin pasta, a ragu, and bechamel. It generally changes to match the tastes and ingredients of where it’s being made, but maybe you’d like the version I know.
I had moussaka in Greece a few years ago and liked it too!
As someone who makes pizza from scratch every week, I love all forms of pizza from fast food US pizza (like Dominos), to “drunk” US pizza dipped in ranch, to NY pizza, to Chicago deep dish, but what I make at home is always simple Italian pizza with just a few ingredients: dough, a sauce made from San Marzano tomatoes specifically canned for pizza with some salt, fresh oregano, mozzarella cheese, and olive oil. Sometimes I add a ton of arugula on top too. What’s nice is that pizza is also kinda healthy actually.
It’s very common in the US to just plop some pasta sauce on top of noodles for one thing… You gotta cook the pasta in the sauce real quick! If any American reads this and doesn’t do that I promise that tiny change will already improve your pasta experience.
Tangentially related: this comment chain reminded me of the categorical imperative (the first formulation in that article)
Honestly I wouldn’t even go so far as home assistant. Do you have any IP cameras or just USB webcams? If you have IP cameras all you need is the VPN and then just access them as if you’re at home. If you only have USB webcams, you’re going to have to stream the content and I believe ffmpeg
is actually capable of taking /dev/videoX
and serving it over RTSP somehow, but I don’t remember exactly how. I see some references to it in some quick searches though. Maybe start here (some blog) or here (Stackoverflow question)?
Another thing to remember is that you’re going to be limited by your upload speed. If you’re not on fiber and in the US that’s likely going to be pretty bad, so set your resolution and the like accordingly.
Sorry about your cat. We typically have a Rover stop in to check on our cats when we’re gone for a bit; it’s nice to get them some human interaction and they always send pictures and give updates.
I personally have a camera setup inside that just streams to HomeAssistant so we can check on them ourselves when we’re out just for the weekend. I disconnect it when Rovers are stopping by though because I don’t want them to feel spied on. No need for anything fancy really, but if you really want NVR I just use Frigate (for other things, the cat camera really is just a stream). It’s free and open source and really easy to set up.
WireGuard is a very easy way to set up the access. My router has just the single WireGuard UDP port forwarded
The real issue is definitely people not having total control over their own devices.
It doesn’t need permissions to be sent pictures from messages though, that’s all local and likely done via an exported Service. Good chance other Google products are or will make use of it in the future.
There are definitely good, non malicious reasons to have it as a separate app and that should actually be preferred. Off the top of my head:
Some people might actually like this: thinking of women getting unsolicited dick picks in particular
Yea, but there are also some things AppArmor just can’t do. Although in my experience most aren’t as big of a deal. Things like saying “only processes of this type can bind to port X” for example and much more fine grained control of file or directory actions. Does AppArmor provide kernel module controls?
They both have really bad documentation though :(
AppArmor is great but it isn’t nearly as powerful as SELinux. Way more user friendly though.
I haven’t looked around that much in years beyond NixOS, what else has MAC by default these days? I remember a lot of the Debian based ones having some things constrained by AppArmor, but I personally prefer SELinux and it wasn’t everything.
I don’t know if it ships with a firewall, but that’s definitely easier than an ad hoc SELinux setup. I always just transfer my iptables (nftables now) rules over.
One of the few with SELinux by default
What’s the give away there? Not doubting just wondering.
I see impedance matched traces so seems like something fast, but that’s all I’d be able to guess.