Haha, I didn't even realize but the resolution is actually identical.
My first laptop was a min-spec Macbook gen 1 (first Intel CPU model). It's the same 1280x800. The modern LCD (or OLED) on a Steam Deck looks way better obviously, and they're different DPI, but the performance hit is identical.
Considering the garage points that way, that might be the front? There's a problem with basically every part of it. The scale is completely off, since the common room looks more like a town hall.
This is just nuts to me... My first laptop came with 512MB of RAM and only supported up to 2GB. They were still selling Macbook Pros with only 8GB of memory a year or two ago.
12GB SHOULD be enough to do everything, especially if it's running a linux OS. But I guess we can't have nice things because of memory hogs like Chrome.
Basically any wave can be created by adding together individual frequencies, and with some fancy math it's possible to go the other way with a Fourier transform and get how loud every frequency is (like is displayed in a spectrogram).
I think the real black magic is in how our ears and brains can decode the mess of information coming in and identify meaningful patterns.
This has been one of my worries when I set up my NAS as encrypted. I ended up going through the recovery process a few times before storing any real data, since I wanted to be sure I could get myself back in if the OS drive failed or something gets corrupted and I have to unlock it from a live USB.
I guess we've learned absolutely nothing from putting all the retirement eggs in the Nortel basket and we're about to lose everyone's pensions yet again.
There's plenty of perfectly fine used vehicles that are old enough to have physical controls, but new enough to still have a reverse camera and Android Auto. Personally I'm not buying any new vehicle with a cellular modem.
I've seen several codebases that have a typedef or using keyword to map uint64_t to uint64 along with the others, but _t seems to be the convention for built-in std type names.
This seems necessary if they're to maintain an IP ban list. You shouldn't just be able to unban yourself by submitting an information deletion request.
There's a few different services you can use to set it up. I quite like Buildkite since they've got a pretty easy setup for running jobs on your own hardware, but I think several other CI services have a self-hosting option.
The best part about it for me is I can run GPU tests and do automatic screenshot diffs for my game engine. Normally renting a GPU server is super expensive, but it's basically free to run myself using my old hardware.
Those specs sound like HDMI 2 anyway. HDMI 2.1 can do 4K @ 144Hz with HDR. Or apparently even 10K @ 120Hz.