That doesn’t have anything to do with whether it’s open-source or not.
That doesn’t have anything to do with whether it’s open-source or not.
The headline seems to mean 81% of generation and storage capacity. When the article talks about battery storage, it only says storage, not generation.
I can’t think of any reason the backend can’t be open-source too.
Yes. A perpetual license just means no fixed end date, not that it’s irrevocable or interminable.
You can probably get away with continuing to use ESXi free licenses even commercially, you just won’t have support. And at home, nothing is going to stop existing versions from working.
Incidentally, assuming I found the right license agreement: https://www.vmware.com/content/dam/digitalmarketing/vmware/en/pdf/downloads/eula/universal_eula.pdf
It doesn’t actually say it’s perpetual. It only says “The term of this EULA begins on Delivery of the Software and continues until this EULA is terminated in accordance with this Section 9”, but that section only covers termination for cause or insolvency, there is no provision for termination at VMware’s discretion. So, while I’m not a lawyer, it definitely sounds like you can continue using ESXi free.
Actually, reading further, I think the applicable license is this one: https://www.vmware.com/vmware-general-terms.html
But that one has even less language about license term and termination. Although it does define “perpetual license” as “a license to the Software with a perpetual term”, again not irrevocable or interminable.
I missed the word “server” every time and thought it was a client, and spent far too long trying to figure out how you’d play Minecraft in Bash. Text based? ASCII graphics?
They don’t have to be stolen. Imagine some clever thief drugging your drink, then when you’re incapacitated they take your phone and press your finger to it or hold it up to your face to unlock it, then transfer all your money out of Venmo or whatever money transfer app you have on your phone.
Just now? Not after any of these? Or the fact that it’s controlled by China?
What do you mean “doesn’t work”? Is there some error message in the log (dmesg, /var/log/messages, on the console, whatever raspbian uses)?
Still can. Only a few years ago, I would cat random things to classmates’ tty devices.
Okay, so can we shunt all the “tech billionaire celebrity entertainment” posts somewhere else?
Yeah. I know of ancient AS/400 and slightly less ancient RS/6000 systems still humming along, keeping insurance companies running.
But they probably haven’t seen software updates in decades. Linux 1.0 didn’t even exist when they were new, let alone 6.7.
Is anyone actually running modern Linux on Itanium? I have never in my life even heard of anyone using those chips. I find it hard to imagine anyone still using them that isn’t running something legacy.
I started banking with them in 2011, I think, on recommendation from friends. I’ve continued to use them because of my satisfaction with the things you’ve mentioned as well as the services they make available through the site and app. (It’s USAA, for reference).
I am a millenial.
Nobody is stopping you from copy-pasting the third clause into the two-clause plus patent license.
What are you trying to accomplish with the patent thing? Have you already patented your software?
There are a bunch of APIs, actually. Plaid is a pretty popular one. The problem is getting the banks to implement them.
But people definitely choose banks because of their apps. For example, my bank doesn’t have any physical branches in my area, so I do everything through the website or app. Remote check deposit through my phone camera, for example.
Captchas or other challenges, and better spambot detection.
Delete the directory, create the file. Docker creates a bind mount as a directory if it doesn’t exist.
Is that an artificial limitation that could be resolved by third-party clients?
I make it green for an ssh session, and red when I’m root. That’s it, nothing fancy.
Are current laws against harassment insufficient?