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Most of the time it was IRQ 7 for me.
Most of the time it was IRQ 7 for me.
You mean lines that some wall street asshole does off a sheet.
Definitely part of the 1% of deserving dipshits.
You could try Emby. It’s freemium, but the free part doesn’t (or didn’t, last time I used it) require an online account.
I have xnayed 737-8 Max planes since the first set of crashes. It wasn’t just a single red flag, it was a whole parade. After this year, I think I’ll also add any Boeing plane manufactured in the past 10 years, which effectively limits the choice to older 777 and 737 models. But even then I’d rather fly Airbus or Embraer.
As a side note, the seats in older planes are much more comfortable too. Newer ones have hardly any padding.
CIV:BE sort of scratches the SMAC itch.
I like Summit. Don’t like the permissions that Sync and Boost require. Connect is OK.
Natural born citizen may be a bit problematic, but there’s precedent with at least one district court recognizing animals as legal persons as of 2021.
On the dystopian side, perhaps this also means a corporation could become POTUS.
You misspelled hamberders.
I imaging that this scenario would be regulated by data protection laws and contracts, not by NDAs.
Can still get foiled by a curb.
… again.
AKA you’ll be removed from the voter pool of you wear it.
rapid mitosis
As in you are seeing multiple boot entries? It’s likely one entry per kernel version that you have installed. It doesn’t happen often these days any more, but in some situations it’s handy to be able to revert to a previous kernel if for example third party modules break.
Counter argument: sometimes our memory of shows is rosier than reality. Take Looney Tunes, for example. Some of those original episodes made fun of mental illness, PTSD, even suicide.
In other cases a rebooted show is absolutely stellar, like BSG.
Not sure about erasing all of it, but it is (or was) certainly possible to delete enough of it to brick a motherboard https://www.phoronix.com/news/UEFI-rm-root-directory
I don’t know where you got the idea that I’m arguing that old versions don’t get new vulnerabilities. I’m saying that just because a CVE exists it does not necessarily make a system immediately vulnerable, because many CVEs rely on theoretical scenarios or specific attack vectors that are not exploitable in a hardened system or that have limited impact.
The fact that you think it’s not possible means that you’re not familiar with CVSS scores, which every CVE includes and which are widely used in regulated fields.
And if you think that always updating to the latest version keeps you safe then you’ve forgotten about the recent xz backdoor.
Just because it has a CVE number doesn’t mean it’s exploitable. Of the 800 CVEs, which ones are in the KEV catalogue? What are the attack vectors? What mitigations are available?
That’s what she said