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7 years later, Valve's Proton has been an incredible game-changer for Linux

Technology
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  • 730 Stimmen
    314 Beiträge
    267 Aufrufe
    T
    Edited to add: sorry, backbone was probably the wrong term to use. The actual history of Australia’s National Broadband Network (NBN) is actually needlessly complicated - primarily due to a (somewhat) successful sabotage attempt by our Conservative government in the early 2010s. But basically, every single new home is built with Fiber to the Home, and every single metropolitan and suburban home either has Fiber to the Home (or Premises), or at the very least Fiber to the Curb through a remediation process to replace the Conservative-implemented Fiber to the Node boondoggle. We also have a number of neighbourhoods stuck with HFC (again due to Conservstice sabotage) which while still delivering 100+ Mbit connections - are a bit of a technical dead end and will need to be remediated at some point in the future. Basically, nbnCo serves as a national broadband wholesaler providing high speed connectivity (100, 250, 500, Gigabit) to something like >95% of the population. The most remote communities are also serviced either through a fixed wireless option or satellite. Basically though, unlike the US we don’t have a significant number of people still on dial-up and haven’t had so for a very long time.
  • Cybercrooks use Raspberry Pi to steal ATM cash

    Technology technology
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    epicfailguy@lemmy.worldE
    Watch them try to ban raspberry pi now ... like they did with the flipper
  • 10 Stimmen
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    69 Aufrufe
    I
    So, China made their own copycat RoboCup competition?
  • Linus Torvalds and Bill Gates Meet for the First Time Ever

    Technology technology
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    N
    Sorry, wasn't my intention
  • How can websites verify unique (IRL) identities?

    Technology technology
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    H
    Safe, yeah. Private, no. If you want to verify whether a user is a real person, you need very personally identifiable information. That’s not ever going to be private. The best you could do, in theory, is have a government service that takes that PII and gives the user a signed cryptographic certificate they can use to verify their identity. Most people would either lose their private key or have it stolen, so even that system would have problems. The closest to reality you could do right now is use Apple’s FaceID, and that’s anything but private. Pretty safe though. It’s super illegal and quite hard to steal someone’s face.
  • How to "Reformat" a Hardrive the American way

    Technology technology
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    T
    It really, really is. Like that scene from Office Space.
  • Matrix.org is Introducing Premium Accounts

    Technology technology
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    F
    It's nice that this exists, but even for this I'd prefer to use an open source tool. And it of course helps with migration only if the old HS is still online.. I think most practically this migration function would be built inside some Matrix client (one that would support more than one server to start with), but I suppose a standalone tool would be a decent solution as well.
  • Napster/BitTorrent for machine learning?

    Technology technology
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    27 Stimmen
    3 Beiträge
    47 Aufrufe
    G
    What would a use case look like? I assume that the latency will make it impractical to train something that's LLM-sized. But even for something small, wouldn't a data center be more efficient?