

Give Every Door a try, StreetComplete is mostly about filling in missing data, every door lets you create/update stuff arbitrarily.
made you look


Give Every Door a try, StreetComplete is mostly about filling in missing data, every door lets you create/update stuff arbitrarily.


Depends on the point of the wiki I feel, if it’s project documentation it should be in git alongside the code, if it’s a generic “document store” then yeah there’s better storage backends than git.


Yep, there’s a reason they turned Office into a web app. Even if companies switch to Linux or macOS, MS can still sell them a subscription to Outlook/Office/etc.
Company wants to move their servers to Linux as well? Well Azure also provides cloud based Linux servers, MS doesn’t care what you run as long as they can make money off it.


CP/M is already open source, so I’m not sure the surviving devs will mind.


By claiming that you own patents on technology used by said format.
The “open royalty free” aspect applies to companies that are a part of the AOMedia group, if you’re not involved with them you’re not covered by the patent grants and restrictions in place, and can charge whatever the courts say is cool.


The best part of the article is the very end, even if the site makes it look unrelated.
Avanci’s Video pool and Access Advance’s Video Distribution Patent pool are both now seeking content royalties from streaming services for the use of HEVC, VVC, VP9, and AV1. Access Advance’s rates are capped at roughly $63 million per year, and Avanci has published rates of 1.6% to 2.0% of revenue or $0.12 to $0.15 per user per month.
$4.5 million max for H.264 is rookie numbers vs. the $63 million max for AV1


There’s BlackSky now, the first full outside server setup (Things like relays and PDSs are just smaller components of the larger required stack)
So you know, they’re at 2 total instances currently.


I remember seeing that years ago, wanted to make like a photoresist mask to etch it into metal.
These days you could probably feed it to a laser engraver, get some nice depth on a thicker sheet of e.g. aluminium, would be a nice display piece at least.


It’s not just bug reports; in the last month, AI driven development has actually gone from slop to reliably better than the average human.
Funny, I heard that same claim about 6 months ago.
And I’m sure I’ll hear it again in another 6 months or so.


Can thank Intel for that, they pressured MS to lower the documented requirements so they could sell more low-end hardware.
Of course, MS executives also gladly went along with it, not like they’re innocent in any way.
Also Nvidia and their drivers caused issues, as usual.


I agree with you, but the cash example is a bad one because there is a push to move entirely to electronic payments.


Some newer radiation hardened stuff is 10x larger than that, older gear even more so. But that just reduces the risk, not sure it’s possible to negate it entirely.
An easier way is to just include more CPUs as part of the system, run them in lockstep, then compare the results by majority rule. If 2/3 CPUs say one answer and the third says something else, you discard the result of the third and go with the other CPUs.


The ladybird devs are currently in the process of switching language again from Swift to Rust, using LLMs.


This isn’t sending your packets anywhere but their closest datacenter, not sure I’d trust MS (Or rather, Cloudflare) with your porn rather than your ISP who you’re actually paying.


The original use case for this stuff was unencrypted HTTP with a public WiFi connection, in which case your ISP is the owners of whatever shop you’re in and yeah they could see everything.
If you’re at home or whatever it offers effectively no benefits, doesn’t “block trackers” or whatever nonsense like Nord claims, but I don’t think Microsoft ever claimed that it did.


IPFS has gateways though, so you can link to the latest version of a page which can be updated by the owner, or alternatively link to a specific revision of the page that is immutable and can’t be forged.


Seems like we need to switch to URLs that contain the SHA256 of the page they’re linking to, so we can tell if anything has changed since the link was created.
IPFS says hi
Yep, sounds about right.