France Just Created Its Own Open Source Alternative to Microsoft Teams and Zoom
France Just Created Its Own Open Source Alternative to Microsoft Teams and Zoom
Not only for them, but any other non-European videoconferencing software.Sourav Rudra (It's FOSS)
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When Silence Is Mistaken for Peace
Many assume the war is over and everything is fine now. That’s not our reality. Gunfire has decreased, but it hasn’t stopped, and daily life is still tight and uncertain. Our calls may be quieter, but the struggle continues. Any support or solidarity still means a lot.
gofund.me/1d3ea05b6
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Tbh I probably wouldn’t have clicked the link if I hadn’t seen your comment, since I thought this was the original title of the video
its what it was originally but youtube has a way for vids to swap out less attractive titles automatically for alternate titles
But RAM on windows is 15GB vs 9.1GB on Bazzite, the difference is massive! That's only Cyberpunk, I didn't finish the video.
Windows is full of crap, especially Windows 11
Too much open-source AI is exposing itself to the web
As if AI weren't enough of a security concern, now researchers have discovered that open-source AI deployments may be an even bigger problem than those from commercial providers.Threat researchers at SentinelLABS teamed up with internet mappers from Censys to take a look at the footprint of Ollama deployments exposed to the internet, and what they found was a global network of largely homogenous, open-source AI deployments just waiting for the right zero-day to come along.
175,108 unique Ollama hosts in 130 countries were found exposed to the public internet, with the vast majority of instances found to be running Llama, Qwen2, and Gemma2 models, most of those relying on the same compression choices and packaging regimes. That, says the pair, suggests open-source AI deployments have become a monoculture ripe for exploitation.
Open-source AI is a global security nightmare waiting to happen, say researchers
Infosec in Brief: Also, South Korea gets a pentesting F, US Treasury says bye bye to BAH, North Korean hackers evolve, and moreBrandon Vigliarolo (The Register)
Moore Threads announces a new GPU architecture that will power upcoming gaming and AI compute GPUs
Moore Threads announces a new GPU architecture that will power upcoming gaming and AI compute GPUs
Moore Threads unveils Huagang architecture with Lushan and Huashan GPUs, promising massive gains in gaming, ray tracing, and AI performance.Rajesh (Gizmochina)
They did discussed things like murders and rapes in the same manner, just a feeling of complete impunity. And lo and behold, they were correct, nobody was and nobody is gonna get prosecuted over this under liberal capitalist system.
Not to mention it was not exactly secret to anyone except western libs that Ponomarev is puppet of west even back then, and look where he is now.
LFS drops support for System V, citing workload problems and upstream dependencies on systemd
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Systemd abstracts so much stuff away that it does not feel like learning Linux "from scratch" :/
(I like having it in my daily driver, but it's sad LFS had to drop support for a "lower level" init system)
(I like having it in my daily driver, but it’s sad LFS had to drop support for a “lower level” init system)
It's not lower-level, it's just worse.
Linux newbie needs help with solaar
Hello I'm a Linux newbie and I need some help. I'm running fedora on my laptop and I want to connect my Logitech mouse. I got solaar installed but I need to manually install the udev rule. I'm following the Instructions here
So I understand that I need to copy rules.d/42-logitech-unify-permissions.rules from the solaar GitHub and place it in /etc/udev/rules.d the thing I don't know how to do is get there. I'm not super familiar with the terminal
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You're not a dumbass, you've just been taught to use a computer wrong by the bad operating system.
This is a useful lesson for linux newbies in general: when you want to install a program, go to your package manager first, not your web browser.
A list of Canadian companies profiting off of ICE and Trump's violent mass deportation regime.
A list of Canadian companies profiting off of ICE and Trump's violent mass deportation regime
Watch now | Several Canadian companies appear to be pocketing profits as this horrific agenda rolls out.Rachel Gilmore (Bubble Pop with Rachel Gilmore)
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muzzle
in reply to Karna • • •Atropos
in reply to muzzle • • •HelloRoot
in reply to muzzle • • •Have you tried selfhosting it? For me, it was unusable, despite a beefy cloud server, even for just 2 people. And thats ignoring setup complexity.
This one is optimized and kubernetes ready, which makes it super easy. Will try out soon.
Auster
in reply to Karna • • •ugo
in reply to Auster • • •jaybone
in reply to Auster • • •Shimitar
in reply to jaybone • • •Nothing to do with license.
Firefox is a massive piece of code and following modern browser standards is so difficult that it's a feat for big teams of developers and no small team seems to be able to pick the pace needed.
idriss
in reply to Karna • • •idriss
in reply to Karna • • •