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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)F
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4 mo. ago

  • I'd still just give it the interfaces and let it do all the network stuff.

  • I don't think you want a bridge in fedora. You probably want to pass the Intel card to opnsense and let it handle all the network stuff.

    As always, I don't recommend virtualizing your router, because it's a huge pain to fix if either it or the host breaks.

  • No, it's worse now. Almost no meat, less veg, more pasta, thinner broth. And what's still in it is lower quality, like I'm sure the meat is like 49% soy protein.

    If you want good soup, you can't get it in a can. (Except clam chowder. Just don't get Campbells or Progresso.)

  • What you're describing is called gastroparesis, and it's a serious medical condition, not something that generally happens to people as a response to certain food.

  • Sort of.

    Governments, including France, want to weaken security. Sometimes they intentionally conflate illegality with security. It sounds like that's what's happening here, with an assist from the journalist who hasn't done any investigation.

  • Apparently dead people waking up happens from time to time. Sometimes vital signs are really hard to detect without hospital equipment.

    And usually they do actually check to make sure someone is dead before harvesting their organs.

  • It's exactly the same material.

    Anything the body doesn't know what to do with, it excretes.

  • It happens in python pip too.

  • Space is "cold" because, compared to Earth, there's no heat energy in the environment. Because there is nothing in the environment at all (mostly).

    Space is also "hot" because compared to Earth, there's no convenient environmental air or water you can use to dissipate heat through conduction or convection. All excess heat must be radiated, which is much, much slower than blowing atmospheric air over a heat exchanger.

  • Yes, I know, that's what I meant. These statements are not attributable to a person.

  • Well, this being the open source community, I would expect most people here to be on the side of respecting the rights of content creators. Like I said, if I write some GPL software, I don't think Microsoft should be able to disrespect my license just because they're also disrespecting everyone else's license too through automation at scale.

    Edit: forgot to mention, since their product is wholly dependent on the other works, that's the very definition of a derivative work. While you could argue it's transformative, it certainly fails the other tests for fair use.

  • Temperature is the measure of the average kinetic energy in the particles of a material. So, if you have a particle traveling really really fast, especially relative to a spacecraft also traveling really really fast, when they collide there's a lot of energy. But nobody would call that temperature in the everyday sense.

    So yeah if you look at the whole kuiper belt and measure the average kinetic energy of the particle flying around at high speed, it would have a high temperature, but that's not necessarily a useful piece of information, unless when you say "what's the temperature of the kuiper belt" you mean "how much kinetic energy do these particles have, because I would like to build my satellite shielding to not be smashed in by the first one it encounters".

  • It's a swiss media group now, but they're still part of the family formerly known as Gawker, and they haven't changed.

  • She's more likely to be the target of a phishing campaign or malicious mobile app.

  • Yeah, that's out of date. While AV still uses file signatures, the modern stuff is behavioral. If you have a file whose instructions use undocumented or low-level APIs, it can look like an exploit and the AV flags it. Endpoint protection products like Sentinelone also take the role of endpoint firewall, managing access to network resources, not just the OS, disk, etc. So if you start sending encrypted requests through uncommon APIs to a cloud server in China, it's gonna get you blocked.

  • Why would it be an expansion? If you're using someone else's work, why wouldn't you need a license? If I write a book and publish it under CC-BY-NC, should Google be allowed to take my work for their commercial product without compensation or even attribution? Should Microsoft be allowed to create closed-source commercial Copilot off GPL source code?

  • Though I didn't see the link to any repos or anything for confirmation.

  • Apertus was developed with due consideration to Swiss data protection laws, Swiss copyright laws, and the transparency obligations under the EU AI Act. Particular attention has been paid to data integrity and ethical standards: the training corpus builds only on data which is publicly available. It is filtered to respect machine-readable opt-out requests from websites, even retroactively, and to remove personal data, and other undesired content before training begins.

    Available doesn't mean licensed for AI training.

  • Sounds like you should just explore TCP, IP, subnetting, routing, and DNS on their own, not necessarily from the perspective of self-hosting.

  • Android @lemdro.id

    Cellebrite leak highlights how much more secure Pixel phones are with GrapheneOS

    www.androidauthority.com /cellebrite-leak-google-pixel-grapheneos-security-3611794/
  • Android @lemmy.world

    Cellebrite leak highlights how much more secure Pixel phones are with GrapheneOS

    www.androidauthority.com /cellebrite-leak-google-pixel-grapheneos-security-3611794/
  • Ye Power Trippin' Bastards @lemmy.dbzer0.com

    Trip of a different flavor: mod removes all comments except their own, then locks post

    lemmy.dbzer0.com /post/51348396