

That’s definitely a possibility, depending on the year and make. Now you’ve given me something to think about.


That’s definitely a possibility, depending on the year and make. Now you’ve given me something to think about.
“You slurred the word ‘golden.’ Roll a d4. You need 20 to live.”
Or, a bag of holding embedded in a doll’s butt. Try being taken seriously when you’re fisting a plushie for a magic potion.


I bought a used Chevy Bolt, then disconnected the antenna to put a dummy load on the OnStar transmitter. Never told it my Wi-Fi password. It can’t connect to the Internet unless I park it next to a cell tower, unless I pay for OnStar, which I refuse to do. I only use CarPlay so it can’t even hope to use my phone’s Bluetooth tethering (not that it seems capable).
Fortunately, Chevy’s only OTA infotainment update was to remove the video player, so I’m not missing much. Unplug the power cord and drive.
Username checks out.
Maybe. Some people have used SpinRite 6.1 to rewrite every sector, and that’s improved performance on some SSD’s. It rewrites each sector and restores the cell’s charge. That’s great if you need the data on there now.
Now, if you’re erasing the disk (by any means, including just a quick format C:), any sectors you use will be written with new data, so that shouldn’t matter.
Just erase the disk (securely, if you want) and get going, and it should be fine.


I’ll second this. I’ve got tons of FLACs. I let PlexAmp do the transcoding in the background.
Because I never learned Bash scripting, for whatever reason, and WSL wasn’t yet available to load on my work PC at the time.


Windows doesn’t make you oil the machine. Your move, nerd. </sarcasm>


You lost the birth lottery. Congratulations. Welcome to crony capitalism.
I graduated college directly into the Great Recession. I’m pushing forty and it took me well into my thirties to find a job in my field that actually paid well and didn’t abuse workers. So now, here I am, getting started in my career a good ten years behind the curve.


However, with macOS 26 (Tahoe) being the final version for Intel-based Macs, Rosetta 2 will be on the chopping block afterwards.


As someone who would like to buy a house and get rid of my landlord, while living in one of the most expensive parts of the United States, I completely understand. It’s a no-win scenario and I’m not getting younger.


I owned one for a while. It was great. But Apple will eventually drop Intel support and these can then become well-built Linux laptops.


This is a compile-time option that will tell the compiler to optimize for the CPU in your computer, rather than any CPU.
By default, the x86_64 kernel will build itself so that it can boot and run on any 64-bit Intel or AMD processor. This means it may have to ignore or check for newer instruction sets like (let’s say, totally at random) AVX512:
if (CPU supports AVX512)
do_efficient_avx512_thing (a, b, c)
else
a = something()
b = some_nonavx512_prep_work()
c = some_other_old_way_of_doing_things()
do_nonavx512_thing (a, b, c)
So, if you have an AVX512-capable CPU, it still has to check before using that instruction. Plus, your compiled kernel will be slightly larger because it needs to contain both ways of doing the thing.
Using this option tells the compiler to compile code optimized for your current processor:
do_efficient_avx512_thing (a, b, c)
This is a gross oversimplication. The compiler will also take things into consideration such as instruction sets, scheduling, core and thread counts, big and small cores, and more.
But the tl;dr is that optimized code is smaller, faster, and maybe a teensy bit more power efficient.
The downside? If you try to boot this optimized code on an older CPU (or rarely, a newer CPU), it will eventually say “illegal instruction” and crash.
I second Waypipe. It tunnels over SSH, and while you have to run a command for it, it’s still much easier than X forwarding.


Processors of that age still exist in special builds, like tougher ones for automotive use with lots of heat and vibration, or radiation-hardened ones for space use where you can’t dispatch a technician. But for consumers use, they’re long dead.


Another KiTTY user! Can you share that setting?
Does CB radio allow data emissions? I thought it was only AM and SSB voice.
Could you send ePub files over ham radio? Let’s forget about TCP-IP mesh networking like AREDN for now. That’s too easy. Let’s look at radio protocols. D-Star can run at 128 Kbps on the 23 cm band. That’s not too common. Drop down to HF and you’re looking at 9 Kbps via PACTOR-IV.
In comparison, landline dial-up modems topped out at around 56 Kbps.
Now, I’ve seen ePub files around 1-2 MB, but that’s with cover art, images, embedded fonts, and all that fun stuff. With enough patience, that can work. But, strip out all that, leaving behind plain text and XML, and you’ve got something much more manageable that can be sent relatively quickly.
I can’t speak for Spain, but in the U.S., the FCC recently removed most symbol rate restrictions, so we might be able to squeeze out a little more speed.
Agreed! Though give me the backports any day.