

It was not just MS. There were those who followed that lead and announced that it was an industry thing.
It was not just MS. There were those who followed that lead and announced that it was an industry thing.
Anyone else remember a few years ago when companies got rid of all their QA people because something something functional testing? Yeah.
The uncontrolled growth in abstractions is also very real and very damaging, and now that companies are addicted to the pace of feature delivery this whole slipshod situation has made normal they can’t give it up.
First two are right on, but I haven’t been charged for an actual software update on the Mac in 30 years.
I did Gentoo in my 20s when all I could afford was garbage computers. I enjoyed the experience — whether it did or not, it made me feel like I was getting the most out of whatever I had, and I learned SO much about Linux.
They probably mean “we use cheap shocks.”
How do you keep all your virtual machines up-to-date? Or are those containers?
I’m a software engineer, not a hardware engineer, but let me guess anyway: the article will imply that they’ve found some magical way to be more “efficient”, but it’s actually that they treat their people like shit and also sacrifice quality. Am I right?
Oh that’s cool! I thought virtio and such were KVM-specific things. I have never been super clear on the relationship between QEMU and the hypervisor itself, like where one ends and the other begins.
Is Apple’s tech going to be using KVM machinery then, or are you just saying that it’s possible in general?
Like, you can use the GPU on Linux…with Metal
I wonder if they’re going to allow GPU access from inside the VMs.
I hope there’s some technological way we can use to foil these attempts to violate citizens’ privacy en masse.