Makes sense. Smart TVs weren’t common at that point, now you can’t avoid them.
Makes sense. Smart TVs weren’t common at that point, now you can’t avoid them.
Yeah, in which case you wouldn’t accept the downtime and would drop the cash on redundant systems.
I mean disaster planning is about finding ways to mitigate things like power or internet going down to minimize or eliminate their impact. That said, accepting the risk of downtime because alternatives are too expensive is a perfectly valid decision as long as it’s an intentional one.
Are you shocked that bad software can crash multiple operating systems or something?
What you’re asking for is a CI/CD pipeline that deploys a set of OS updates as a set revision. I don’t the details on how to do it but that’s the concept you’re asking for.
Use a CI/CD pipeline with a one box and preprod and run service integration tests after the update.
HDR content looks washed out on my HDR TV and my work Mac. At this point I’m pretty sure “washed out” is just the HDR look. I just turn it off in anything I can now.
There are no actual numbers. There are gross payroll numbers and number of employees per high level department, but no indication of how that’s distributed or if it includes things like benefits. Basically useless info in a vacuum
Is this about emarkers? It’s just advertising cable speeds and power capacities for charging.
I’m sure it’ll be airgapped and completely separate from the rest of AWS.
That’s why you build it in Australia and only give Australian citizens with appropriate security clearances direct operational access.
There was a code change to proton to remove stutters in ER
You’re just irrationally disliking it based on the name “AI” and nothing factual.
I think that sounds like a cool use case. If it runs locally what’s not to like?
Yep, no one claimed otherwise.
AWS also rarely turns off services that customers are using going so far as to support customers using outdated services for years. Of the major cloud providers only Google does this.
Yes, you create virtual nics tied to the physical one.
In larger networks VLANs let you do network segmentation across switches, which you can’t really do otherwise.
I wouldn’t bother at home.
Oh, I think I saw this movie https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gung_Ho_(film)