@clacke @tindall I have for a long time been of the opinion that the number of people that understands technology is constant. Back in the 80's the people who understood technology and the people who used technology was roughly the same set. This led to a misbelief that using technology made you understand it.
Turns out that the cause and effect were reversed, and just like how you don't have to be a mechanic to drive a car these days, you don't have to understand technology to use it.
The notion that kids who grew up with a smartphone in their hand would understand technology like a child learns their mother's tongue is a huge, and frankly dangerous, lie that keeps being told even today. The term "digital native" is annoying me.
Just like the people who know how to design cars put things like seatbelts, crash protection, engine temperature warnings, etc into the cars to make them safe to use for people who are not mechanics, it's the duty of tech people to make the products they make safe for the users.
The tech industry is full of drug dealers only interested in peddling their dangerous wares rather than engineers that design safe products for the public's use.
I am curious what they are up to that messes with SSL. My Samsung phone freaked out and recommended I gtfo the network, which was actually reassuring.
LOL you need 2 GPUs? Fuck Nvidia.
"The adamant sysadmins who preferred a decade old distribution instead of the goodness of the latest software and updates didn’t like this democratic decision of Red Hat."
Shut up, you absolute clown.
This is just the strangest thing I have read in a long time. Was it written by Redhat?
https://itsfoss.com/rhel-stream/
A year ago we said it was troubling that the so-called predictive policing program created by Banjo used “artificial intelligence” hidden inside a black box. A state audit has now revealed that the company had no AI to speak of. https://www.vice.com/en/article/pkd7pk/banjo-ai-surveillance-utah-contract
FOSS, motorbikes, and photography.