Crowdstrike has a lot of internal control of your machine in order to do things like hook into the processes you are running to observe any malicious activity. It makes sense that a bug could bring the whole system down.
Crowdstrike has a lot of internal control of your machine in order to do things like hook into the processes you are running to observe any malicious activity. It makes sense that a bug could bring the whole system down.
I will never understand how some people have no morals and will purposely enact laws to make people’s lives worse.
Correct, this is why we should just run every where.
Sometimes nuking and resetting up is faster than fixing the problem.
For your line of work, maybe not. But who cares? They can hire more employees or pay them overtime.
We aren’t machines. What’s the point of life if all we ever do is work? Are we working to live, or living to work? A 32 hour work week makes it a 4/3 day split instead of a 5/2 day split. Seems a lot more balanced if you ask me.
I often dream of that alternative universe where Bernie became president instead of Biden…
Whatever happened to the Professor Layton game? Was hoping to see that.
Sunk cost fallacy and tribalism.
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Hey, that’s not fair! Sometimes I write 3 lines.
That’s dumb, it should be the other way around. By default it should come with Linux, and you have the option of picking the Windows edition instead and pay that Microsoft tax.
How else am I supposed to run Bonzi Buddy?
The people who do care have already switched to Linux.
Am I the only one who first thought that the dog in the picture was wearing shoes?
Yeah, for sure, complex things like that require jumping into config files such as the fstab. Very nice you figured it out! I’ve been there too.
I don’t doubt it would be faster and easier to do in Windows when the router manufacturer intended for users to be using Windows. You are going against the grain sometimes when using Linux, but it is ever so much more satisfying when you do get it working :)
You can use the file manager program or the disk utility for a permanent mount. It works a bit differently than windows. However, it sounds like you are not willing to learn. So I would recommend sticking to Windows.
Honestly, I appreciate those “is this dead” issues. It’s a good way to check the pulse of project before you try to integrate it as a dependency for your own. But really it should only be done of there has been no activity for some time (like 2 years or so). A simple “it’s not dead, it’s just feature complete” or “big fixes only” would go a long way to assure the community.
I never make those issues myself, but I appreciate the others who do.
Knowing Nintendo, they would probably make the joycons cross compatible with the Switch 2, and that console will probably not have a way to charge the original joycons due to change in form factor or something. So a product like this might make perfect sense at this time.