Like it’s a jeopardy question lol
Find me on Mastodon! @stefenauris@furry.engineer
Mastodon
Like it’s a jeopardy question lol
I’m not sure how much we can trust matrix either to be honest. There’s some cryptographic flaws in their Olm Library. https://soatok.blog/2024/08/14/security-issues-in-matrixs-olm-library/
As it turns out being both secure and convenient is very difficult
Love this extension <3
It’s not happening, ever. Someone has to build the AI after all
I still think the fact it works as well as it does at all is incredible
Me too! This is certainly news to me!
Wow really? That’s kind of a shitty stance for them to take.
A tech company becomes dominant through underhanded tactics? Say it ain’t so!
Kind of reads like Microsoft’s rise to dominance. Good find!
Businesses could save a lot of money by just firing their CEOs
What could go wrong?! :D
For better or worse this just points to a continued feeling of incompetence and a sense of being lost from Google
In my experience the best way to find out is to spin up your own instance and play around with it! Docker makes this super easy because you can throw it away after without making any changes to your server. Searxng works pretty easily in a docker container
I didn’t name it xD
As I recall someone made the same lame argument about the name being divisive, a fork was created called Glimpse and it fell on its face not long after it was formed. Things like this are a waste of energy, nobody cares that it’s called gimp.
hi guys its just google! so listen we can’t decide on how to brand any of our services so if you don’t like something don’t worry it will be changed in 6 months or less!
Lol okay. Good luck with that
Die? No there’s no way to put that genie back in the bottle. It might just be a little different going forward.
Of course threads would have higher download counts! By now everyone using X already has it installed while threads is a new service so you’d have to install the app to try it. What a brain dead article
Debian is a distro of few surprises and stable but slightly out of date packages. Their software repositories are vast and supported across pretty much every architecture you could think of running Linux on.
Meanwhile the world of RHEL has been turned upside down with Redhat essentially putting a paywall around their sources. Although Rocky currently promises to continue being bug for bug compatible with RHEL it remains to be seen if they can continue to do so (in my opinion)
No wonder these things operate slow as shit!