If you complete your death transaction without filing out a suicide and/or falling accident permit, you will be posthumously demoted!
ozymandias117
I don't understand why you would expect it not to increase safety.
It gives a visual cue to drivers that it is more likely someone is intending to cross at this location.
That's why I was saying macOS is really the only option if your definition of "year of" is suspend/resume reliability. It highly depends on the hardware for Linux/Windows
The last two Windows laptops I've used (last 5 years), one wouldn't suspend correctly (in suspend, it wouldn't fully suspend and drained >5% battery/hour) and the other, on resume, couldn't play audio without restarting
I've never had a Windows laptop suspend correctly, so...
I guess it's the year of the macOS desktop?
You walked so I could run 🙂
I loved the idea of the framework when it was announced, but I wanted to see a couple iterations proving out it was really going to be upgradable and repairable
Loving it now
Just a heads up, if you're on the 7040 mainboard, I needed to add this to the kernel command line on Debian 13 for reliable suspend/resume. Without it, the screen would just be grey sometimes and not resume
amdgpu.dcdebugmask=0x10
Edit: may also only affect the 2.8k display
Getting rid of that forced restart will at least help me personally stay more secure and get bug fixes faster
It's partially true
The Late Show was canceled after Paramount settled with Trump. The exact details aren't public knowledge, but it certainly seems likely it was part of the settlement
https://www.dw.com/en/cbs-axes-colberts-the-late-show-after-trump-deal-quip/a-73322132
Yeah, that's why I'd like some more insight.
The initial headline doesn't exactly pass a sniff test... It's possible, but unlikely.
If ~34,000 were added in the last year, that means over 25% of Steam's library of ~114,000 was added in the last year...
If only 1/5 of those were using generative AI, why was there such a massive increase over the last year?
Has Steam made it easier for cash grabs, or... it just doesn't make a lot of sense without more information
How many of the ~6,818 titles now disclosing generative AI use were already on Steam in 2024?
I.E. are a lot of these just games that had already been released, updating their disclosure statements based on Valve's new rules?
The article says 1/5 games released this year use it. I'm not sure if ~34,000 games have released on Steam in the last year
I get wanting to move away from "master," but why in the world didn't we use "trunk"
It was already a standard name, and it fits "branches," etc.
It's from Futurama