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in reply to filister

Nvidia's anti-competitive monopoly should be broken up over this API.

The fact AMD was visibly scared to even be associated with this project is a big fucking hint to regulators that CUDA is vendor lock-in tool which Nvidia guards at all costs.

in reply to mindbleach

Is that why they prevented it from being open sourced? I thought I read a while back that they just wanted to keep the code in-house.

in reply to Garibaldee

i have no hope that netanyahu will ever face justice; but maybe this guy will since he's eschewing his diplomatic immunity for whatever reason.
in reply to eldavi

Plot Twist: he gets whacked by one of the supporters of the Netanyahu-Gvir clique
in reply to eldavi

I mean, it's not a twist, but yeah, it's prolly certainly expected. Gallant is a major asset to their plan in Gaza and no way he's going to detach himself from the project without consequences
This entry was edited (11 months ago)
in reply to Lemmygradwontallowme [he/him, comrade/them]

maybe it's a little bit of poetic justice that he'll be unalived by the same machine he helped create.


American Gentry


in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

They have a soft paywall now: archive.ph/zDCqm

These elites’ wealth derives not from their salary—this is what separates them from even extremely prosperous members of the professional-managerial class, such as doctors and lawyers—but from their ownership of assets.


The Atlantic has gone tankie.

in reply to davel

Patrick Wyman in general has pretty good analysis I find. He's a historian, and he has a great podcast series on the fall of Rome which I can highly recommend.




Xbox Controller Connection Issues


cross-posted from: discuss.tchncs.de/post/2774244…

Hi folks,

I got a new Xbox Series X Controller (Model 1914). I had Xbox One controller before.

With xpadneo installed I had basically no problems running my xbox one controller. It connected via BT with no issues and workes in games really well wired and wireless.

The new controller on the other hand, works really well via cable, but does not connect via BT. I can find it, I can pair it, but I cannot connect to it.

xpadneo readme says Series X needs a BT stick with BLE so I bought one, but that did not solve the problem (I'm not sure if BLE needs to be activated or how to do it rn).




in reply to schizoidman

It said police had violently broken up a blockade by around 30 supporters who had broken through a barrier near the president's residence in the South Korean capital Seoul.


Yoon supporters: there are dozens of them. Dozens!

in reply to davel

Yoon supporters: there are dozens of them. Dozens!


that's why i'm pessimistic about luigi's trial; they only need one dozen to burry him.




in reply to eldavi

That's also becoming more difficult now due to economic alternatives that BRICS provides. The common approach US takes is to use sanctions as a form of siege warfare first, then try to do some form of regime change on that basis. However, if countries are able to trade outside the US system that whole scheme falls apart. This is the major reason for the whole Pink tide in Latin America now. A lot of the countries are able to break away from the US because they can lean on China economically.
in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

yes and i bet that's why my gov't is responding w the military in peru and i expect that they will do the same w mexico; it'll be an military iron fisted death grip intended to destroy any attempts at creating an economy through any alternatives like english did to irish. the canadians tried to do something similar to their first nations; but public sentiment changed enough to force them to reverse course and something like this is latin america's only hope no matter how rich or powerful china gets.
in reply to eldavi

Thing is that the US is not all powerful. There are already severe economic problems, and engaging in military action all over the world will only make things worse. And that will translate into further domestic unrest in the US.
This entry was edited (11 months ago)
in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

yes and i suspect that it's only a matter of time and i'm pessimistic atm because that scale of that time is in centuries like it was for the irish and canada's first nations.

the unrest will pervade the americas for a very long time given the nature of the natural boundaries and trade traffic through this side of the planet; only periodically quelled by the american military like the ancient egyptians did with their own military and people in the centuries immediately after the bronze age collapse.

the nations the furthest from this declined empire's imperial core will be the first to shake off the grip and it will cascade; but i suspect that the countries nearest it (both geographically and economically) will be stuck the longest, if not permanently through induced culture change or war.

in reply to eldavi

There's a Lenin quote that says that there are decades when nothing happens and then there are weeks when decades happen. These things aren't linear. The contradictions can build for a long time, and it can look like the system is stable and even inevitable, then the collapse comes seemingly all at once. The US is very much in the stages of the empire where things are starting to unravel now, and I think we are absolutely entering the weeks when decades happen stages.

There's actually surprisingly decent analysis from capitalist perspective on this by Ray Dalio in Principles for Dealing with the Changing World Order: Why Nations Succeed and Fail. He identifies a lot of the trends that the US empire in its current state shares with past empires when they started entering a period of collapse.

in reply to eldavi

The US isn't even able to produce enough bombs for their proxy wars, never mind actually fighting peer powers


Unknown parent

lemmy - Link to source
lukewarm_ozone

Oh, the lab leak/zoonosis debate is a good thought, but I don't think it counts as a conspiracy - if I search for news articles from before 2022 mentioning it, I immediately find, say, this BBC article from 2020 that treats lab leak seriously, so it was a mainstream-ish idea quite early on. This seems to match with my own memories, I've seen lab leak being discussed in 2022 and I think even earlier.

In general, though, there's probably some good COVID-related example, even if I can't think of one immediately (I think it's pretty disingenuous how media demonized every prospective COVID drug, especially ivermectin - but they did turn out to be ineffective against the virus itself, and I don't think there were any conspiracies about the drugs that ended up actually working, like Paxlovid).

This entry was edited (11 months ago)


Israel sees growing exodus as at least 82,000 leave country in 2024


cross-posted from: aussie.zone/post/16565334
in reply to schizoidman

Makes sense when you unapologetically commit genocide, deny it at every turn, while endangering entire populations of Palestinians and Jews all over the world in the process.

So maybe stop killing children? It'll do wonders.


in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

This will be interesting to monitor. Seems like a potential test balloon for China to observe the effects on these companies and map out what kind of leverage China actually has on the defense industry.


[completed] Working on a project and a survey about GNU/Linux security. Survey results in post.


~~i have created a short questionnaire, regarding how GNU/Linux users secure their system. if you are somewhat knowledgeful on this topic and willing to share, i would appreciate if you would fill out my questionnaire~~

okay, so, my research is finished. here are the results:

The "other" distributions include: NixOS (8x), Gentoo (4x), Slackware (1x), Void Linux (1x) or a combination of multiple distributions

This entry was edited (11 months ago)
in reply to seal51890

When was this questionnaire posted? I didn't see it and get a chance to answer.

Also, I treat servers different to desktops due to different threat models. The server automatically applies security updates and keeps most feature updates sitting for a while for stability, but on desktop I just install everything within a couple of days.

This entry was edited (11 months ago)
in reply to seal51890

It's nice getting a glimpse as to what fraction of Linux users are using disk encryption. Full disk encryption is becoming the default on mainstream OSes, but not in most of the Linux installers I've encountered. Always made me curious just how many people went out of their way to encrypt their Linux install.

I personally encrypt everything except for VMs already in an encrypted device or USB drives that need to work with non-Linux machines. It'd be interesting to hear what other people's reasons to encrypt their disks or not are.