

Never tried the string lights, just the bulbs over WIFI.
Never tried the string lights, just the bulbs over WIFI.
You could argue kernel mailing lists are more of a shit show.
No CRI information, which means it’s probably garbage. Nanoleaf is still better and cheaper, plus you can choose between Matter/WIFI or Matter/Thread versions.
A lot of mice list the switches they’re using, so you can just google it and see what its sound profile is like. Anything with a sensor from the past 6 years will perform the same, so just pick whatever you like the most based on shape and color.
I wonder what’s going to happen once NVIDIA reminds them that their best product literally depends on SK Hynix.
PCIe will be obsolete before they figure out how to provide a stable PCIe 8.0 interface. I’d be surprised if they even manage to make a 7.0 compliant motherboard by 2040. Trying to maintain backwards compatibility for 20+ years is just stupid.
Don’t worry guys. You can just attend the iconic Esports World Cup (life changing money, btw) and see how great Saudi Arabia really is.
You can allow guest accounts, although it’s disabled by default in synapse.
Call supports depends on the client you’re using. Element is usually ahead in features implementation, but you can get a list of clients and filter by features in the matrix website.
Also I’m not sure what the other person meant by easy to setup. Matrix servers are notoriously hard to setup when compared to anything most things you would find yourself selfhosting, specially with WebRTC/TURN. I think there’s an ansible playbook somewhere, but I never tried it.
You’d make a great tech CEO.
This has nothing to do with tariffs.
I guess that makes sense.
Sure, but that’s not relevant. Unless you’re suggesting that people buying a train is a better idea than buying a Tesla.
Hint: None of those companies make electric vehicles.
You can run an imitation of the DeepSeek R1 model, but not the actual one unless you literally buy a dozen of whatever NVIDIA’s top GPU is at the moment.
I can’t believe some people think that putting tariffs on a country means the country will just give the government 25% of everything and the merchants of that country are not just going to raise the prices to match the new expenses(or maybe even a little bit more since they have a good excuse to change prices)
I’m not sure anyone believes that. The point of tariffs is that merchants will have to increase prices to keep the same profit, causing people to purchase less of the product and look for cheaper alternatives (those without tariffs).
Modern AMD CPUs have 24 PCIe 5.0 lanes, and decent modern GPUs like the ARC B580, RX 7600 XT, RTX 4060 Ti only use 8 lanes of PCIe 4.0. That would leave you with 16 5.0 lanes, which isn’t too bad.
Moore’s Law makes no mention of transistor size, only of transistor count. You can say it’s been dead for over a decade if you define a decade as 4 years. Anyways, it is useless since transistor count is proportional to die area and doesn’t really define to how good a chip is.
Mining is easy, but most countries don’t want to deal with the problems that come with refining.
Better how? I define good light by its CRI. The expensive Hue (which isn’t even the topic of this thread) lists >80, the essentials version doesn’t even list it. Nanoleaf lists >90. Also, Hue lights don’t offer a Matter over WIFI version, only Thread.