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in reply to Karna

Why would they name it "Visio"? That is already the name of a different Microsoft product.
in reply to ooterness

Because that's the French word for it, a visioconférence.


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


When Silence Is Mistaken for Peace




When Silence Is Mistaken for Peace




Bazzite Linux SMASHES Windows


in reply to AllzeitBereit

i thought the sloptuber title was funny tbh. 5-10 fps over windows isnt exactly like, mind numbing, but its cool to see the tests
in reply to marcie (she/her)

It's funny if you know that it is parody, but it's so widespead in this day and ago so I tend to unconsciously filter it out. 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
in reply to ffhein

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

in reply to marcie (she/her)

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

This entry was edited (3 hours ago)


The ‘Wall of Tears’ in New York: when the names of Gaza’s children become testimony that refutes Israel




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.




Evening in Stockholm - 1945




in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

I swear to god it's so easy to stop CIA psyops I could do it with my eyes closed, yet libs need this kind of shit and will still doubt it.