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Jokes on you, I subscribed to my mobile plan 8 years ago and I still pay 6€ for unlimited calls/sms and 30GB (Italy, Iliad)
Jokes on you, I subscribed to my mobile plan 8 years ago and I still pay 6€ for unlimited calls/sms and 30GB (Italy, Iliad)
Isn’t there already Box64/Box32? Not to mention most Linux software is already compiled for ARM thanks to being open source.
They used to, but they weren’t very good.
TBF the report says this was done using credential stuffing, so it wasn’t really Roku’s fault.
Because Rust is not the only language that made this faulty assumption. It is an issue that affects Rust’s stdlib, just like it is an issue that affects Python’s stdlib and other libraries. In fact this was first reported as a vulnerability to yt-dlp (where it was actually exploitable) and then discovered it applied to many other libraries (where the exploitability is highly dependent on how the feature is used).
Rust here is only used as clickbait because of its aim to be “safe”, but its position is no different from other languages.
If you read the article from the researcher that discovered the vulnerability you’ll see they never call out Rust in particular, only as part of a list of languages that are affected. https://flatt.tech/research/posts/batbadbut-you-cant-securely-execute-commands-on-windows/
More like Windows showing ads even when you boot Linux
However, how are they sabotaging it working on Linux.
For example they discontinued support for Rocket League on Linux (and Mac) after buying Psyonix.
I mean, if they actually tried it they should know what it’s about even without reading the article…
Citra is a 3DS emulator, this is a DS one, how are you comparing them?
They do kinda have a point against Spotify but they conveniently omit the fact that Apple Music, their own music app, competes against Spotify without those restrictions that Spotify wants to remove.
Even after reading the key points it wasn’t clear “how” they manage to do that. The article is not much more detailed, but at least mentions them exploiting android’s accessibility services.
Even if the compiler was available to the public most software doesn’t use it, so the benchmark is still not representative of real world performance.
People can only remember a limited number of passwords without resorting to systems or patterns.
People also don’t have a backup device though.
Because some very important applications (microsoft office, adobe suit, some very popular multiplayer games, cad software etc etc) still don’t work.
And have you ever seen a bolt fall off a plane you were flying on?
But I just need to find one that doesn’t and by an open source Android there will always be an image to flash.
Unfortunately sooner or later Play Integrity will make this unfeasible in practice.
As long as many important games fall into that 10% many gamers won’t consider Linux.
Not to mention Adobe/Office/CAD suites that will prevent others from switching.
And finally most pcs are sold with windows preinstalled and the vast majority of people don’t even know that other OS even exist.
QEMU have qemu-user (if you didn’t know), which basically Rosetta for Linux, but with a good performance hit when testing cross-compiled code.
Aren’t Box64 and FEX faster though?
Every atom has energy in it, regardless of whether it is radioactive or not. Radioactiveness just makes it relatively easy to extract that energy. But even then, it’s not that simple, not every radioactive material is good for a nuclear reactor. If the fuel absorbs too many neutrons without fission, or produces elements that do, then it can become poison for the reactor. And if it, or the elements it produces, emit very few delayed neutrons and very quickly then it makes it harder to keep the reactor in a sub-critical state (i.e. it makes it harder to not make it explore). Often for these reasons you can’t fully use reprocessed fuel, and instead you have to mix it in low percentages with normal fuel. Reprocessed fuel is also harder (thus cost more) to produce since you have to work with highly radioactive materials.
To be fair trees still use energy for doing this, but that energy is conveniently provided by the sun.