The texture healing technique is technically brilliant, but imho looks weird.
I will stick to Source Code Pro.
The texture healing technique is technically brilliant, but imho looks weird.
I will stick to Source Code Pro.
I don’t think Lemmy is more privacy friendly. In fact, its, arguably, even less privacy friendly that others.
Why cotton instead of linen? At least in Spain, linen is more popular as summer clothing, and definitively feels fresher.
Any site worth its salt (heh) will verify criteria on client for UI reasons, not just in the backend
Didnt know Nushell, but that looks better than cmder! Will give it a try.
Both of those progressing nicely in Spain, and the result was… a rise of the right, that has doubled down on destroying the aquifers in the south, the most affected region.
So the worse things become, the more people turn a blind eye to the issue.
Do people have such short memory? The US does it, yeah, it was a super major scandal years ago. Spying not just on “enemy” states but also supposed allies, as well as all citizens all over.
Set your build goals now (check !buildapc@lemmy.world ) and use alerts/price trackers to see good deals. There are some good deals on Black Friday but many are bogus, its to better to check every now and then for deals.
Yeah, the password is much better. In Windows you also realize it because the admin screen is hard to miss, but you can just go ahead and accept it, since many users run their PC as admins.
I mean, in europe they are more expensive, 4070RTX was about 700€ (770$). Different currencies and different taxes. And greed.
If you have root in linux you can disable that, so you are in the same state. You could also selfsign.
This is an issue, but IMHO quite overblown.
nVidia GPUs:
970GTX was 329$ in 2014
1070GTX was 379$ in 2016
2070RTX was 499$ in 2018
3070RTX was 499$ in 2020
4070RTX is 599$ in 2023
Probably, the 5070 in 2025-6 will be 650-700.
With admin privileges you can do the first one though, as the whole revocation list on certs is a fucking general mess (and that applies to web in general, not just windows).
In general if your attacker is admin or has tricked you into executing something as admin, you are pretty much fucked, regardless of drivers.
No, that exploited a legitimate driver to be a point of entry and enable other attacks, and is much more problematic.
This enables attackers to make non legitimate drivers appear legitimate to windows, but they have to be installed anyway, requiring admin privileges.
Yes and no. It’s an escalations issue. Even with administrator access, you are not supposed[note1] to be allowed to install drivers with invalid signature, which supposedly haven an even high chain of trust (although this really iffy unless you are using secureboot as well but that’s another discussion).
That said, when the attacker already has admin privileges you are so far in the compromised chain that the kernel driver is an issue, but you are most likely completely fucked anyways.
This just makes your vulnerability state to be the same as in linux, where your drivers arent required to be signed in the first place, for example.
[note 1]: There’s a caveat, with admin acess you can disable driver signatures entirely, using bcdedit, this is called test signing and leaves a visible watermark at all times with “Test signing enabled”, therefore the user can already see that the computer is compromised. Its mostly useful for devs (or attacking people who dont give a fuck).
The whole signing of kernel drivers and UEFI code has always felt more of a walled garden/security racket to get actual legitimate hobbyist/open source to pay a shit ton for certificates, rather than actual security. Especially with all the hoops with older version support (if you wanted to fully support win vista or early7 you needed to dual sign with sha1, and most cert companies didnt know that and you had to fight with them to provide one), and the super shitty page that was the windows development hardware center for signing.
Linux Kernel is kind of a bad example since its one of the examples of project scaling with many people from many companies. Even if you want to go with its inception, it came from Unix which already had many people. Of course, its also one of the best examples of actual leadership, proper technical people management, which is something very hard to come by. Its also a great example of how to divide your design and make it scalable, so people are working on different parts totally independent on each other.
That’s all actual, proper, work, not whatever crappy slide presentation passes as leadership on many places.
… Im not sure if I follow your interpretation.
All Im saying is that people doing farming without knowledge is not a solution and they can easily make soil worse, and if they want to contribute, they can do better by planting native flora.
Because it introduces a whole lot of new issues. People could make things so much worse. IMHO the real alternative is, if you have actual land, is to put native plants. That will help the ecosystem, retain water, attract life etc and all that is better than random farming.
Not to mention, Pomegranate in Spanish is Granada, literally Grenade. It’s also one of the more famous regions in Spain, and it exports a lot of that fruit, which, as is usually the csse, has both Spanish and Portuguese on the labels to reduce costs.
No one in Portugal should jump to that conclusion unless they are ridiculously xenophobic.