Price = 150.38$
Low Price = 147.43 $
High Price = 151.1 $
Height = 3214946
Hashrate = 2.86 Gh/s
Difficulty = 343.59 G
AMD To Provide Update On Long-Term Strategy For Open-Source Firmware
Next month AMD will be providing an update on their long-term strategy for open-source firmware. Central to their open-source firmware plans is their OpenSIL effort that remains in development for eventually replacing AGESA on future generations of Ryzen and EPYC platforms...
https://www.phoronix.com/news/AMD-Open-Source-FW-Strategy
Microsoft is enabling BitLocker device encryption by default on Windows 11 - Photo by Chris Welch / The Verge
Microsoft is maki... - https://www.theverge.com/2024/8/14/24220138/microsoft-bitlocker-device-encryption-windows-11-default
LLM-based sentiment analysis of Hacker News posts between Jan 2020 and June 2023 https://outerbounds.com/blog/hacker-news-sentiment/
Someone shared these handy functions with us a couple of years back
function third(){ awk '{if (NR%3==0){print "\033[32m" $0 "\033[0m"} else{print}}'; }
every third line looks nice
#bash #sh #zsh #ksh #csh #100DaysOfCode #Linux #POSIX #advancedProgramming
Grok-2 Beta Release https://x.ai/blog/grok-2
images of St Bees, England #art #arts #photography #photographs #travel #travels #traveling #england #inspiration #art #artnet #world #artist #artists #artnet
Proton VPN Browser Extensions Now Available for Free Plan Users
Proton, the company behind a suite of privacy-focused services, has made the Proton VPN Chrome and Firefox extensions available to those with a Proton Free plan. Prior to now, only users who subscribed to a paid Proton VPN tier were able to use its official web extensions for Mozilla Firefox and Google Chrome (plus other Chromium-based browsers). The change is big news. We’re excited to announce that Proton VPN’s browser extensions will now be available to everyone with a Proton Free plan. Now that they’re available for free, they make it easier for people worldwide to protect their privacy and
#News
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/08/proton-vpn-browser-extensions-available-to-free-users
C++ programmer′s guide to undefined behavior: part 3 of 11
https://pvs-studio.com/en/blog/posts/cpp/1149/
Discussions: https://discu.eu/q/https://pvs-studio.com/en/blog/posts/cpp/1149/
Security Notions for Fully Encrypted Protocols https://petsymposium.org/foci/2023/foci-2023-0004.pdf This paper gives the first definitions for FEPs, examples of how existing protocols fail to satisfy them, and a novel protocol that does satisfy them.
Looks like I may have lost 300 followers since #Mastodon decided not to migrate them to #Fosstodon 😢
If you're interested in #OpenSource, #FOSS, #marketing, #Nextcloud and related topics, do give me a follow. Especially if you remember following me before.
Thank you 😀
Boosts appreciated 🙏🏻
Recent Linux Filesystems tests on phoronix is promising
https://www.phoronix.com/review/linux-611-filesystems
Discussions: https://discu.eu/q/https://www.phoronix.com/review/linux-611-filesystems
Now that police may be subject to biometric data collection to enter sporting events, they are finally starting to see the dangers of facial recognition. https://www.nbcsports.com/nfl/profootballtalk/rumor-mill/news/nfls-new-credentialing-process-sparks-a-dispute-in-las-vegas
🐦🔗: https://nitter.oksocial.net/EFF/status/1823435378130595869#m
[2024/08/13 19:04]
Seems I don't quite understand how the Apple II GCR decoding works. I capture a sector of data, after demapping and un-xoring, the value at 0x55 makes no sense (highlighted in second image). It’s 0x20 which has a bit set in what I thought were unused bits. Checksum matches. After denibblizing the data looks ok, it's Track 17/Sector 0 of a DOS 3.3 catalog.
What am I doing wrong?
Plain text of screen caps here: https://www.retrobattlestations.com/gcr-debug.txt
Here is some more higher quality live gameplay: https://www.twitch.tv/stuxcat