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Wait until you run `pkg upgrade` and it takes several times the 150MiB...

Please read entire article (or at least skim read it) because I also cover that part :)

Fine, but a normal USB stick isn't a DFU capable USB *host*. DFU is a protocol for a *host* to update on a device. Unless you're trying to update the firmware of the USB stick the direction is wrong.

At most the DFU capable USB port on the Mac doesn't support booting of USB mass storage devices for some stupid reason.


I would love to see a comparison between the A725 and X925 cores.

Not quite in the same depth, but there are some more general benchmarks across all cores and latencies here: https://github.com/geerlingguy/sbc-reviews/issues/92

Wow, this repo and the ai-benchmarks repo are the ones I wanted https://github.com/geerlingguy/ai-benchmarks/issues/34

Thank you for doing these. Earned a star and a watch from me on both! Minor sponsor donation as gratitude.

Would be sick to have an RSS feed for your data releases.


Will consider that at some point; a lot of the time is just spent getting the data, heh.

Note to myself: Cortex X925 was originally called X5. The Current Generation X930 is now called C1-Ultra used in Mediatek 9500.

Has anyone told them teens would create accounts with foreign VPN services?

IP blacklisting will follow.

Just use Tor. And if they try to block that, use Snowflake bridges or v2ray like people in other censorious hellholes.

Make them shut it all down like Iran and show who they really are.


> Make them shut it all down like Iran

They are certainly providing an opportunity for those who would like to inflict that.


Press escape, select the other user, login?


Time to protect EU citizens from US human rights abuses. Require EU banks to ignore foreign sanctions and call the US bluff.


Yeah, the EU should just call the bluff. The US is not going to do anything other than shake their fist angrily.


The problem there is that the EU has started copying the USA, and has just recently sanctioned multiple journalists for telling stories that don't align with their narrative on Russia/Ukraine.


Russia invaded Ukraine in its quest to enlarge the imperium. Russia is an aggressor seeking to expand even more.


Regardless, should we really sanction our own citizens simply for reporting, in good faith, something that goes against the state-sponsored narrative (true or otherwise)?

This is legit the kind of stuff we used to use as examples as why "Russia is bad".


There is no equivalency bettween what Russia actually does here these days ... or between what was going on in Russia as Putin cemented his power, ressurected Stalins mythology about Stalin as a great leader and how communist Russia operated.

These false equivalencies amd attempts to hint that Ukraine war is anything else then a territorial expansion are not just "regardless".

They are the core issue.


You've side-stepped my question entirely - should we really be sanctioning journalists? Is that really a sign of healthy democracy and free speech?


For me, the really i.portsnt point is to not imply whatever conspira y theory about Ukraine deserving it could be implied.

And likewise, the importsnt part for me was to negate the false equivalency.

I am ok with sanctioning Russia as such, as much as possible. Sadly they have powerful allies in US now ... but for now, Russia and US are the greatest threats to freedom in Europe.


We're not discussing conspiracy theories, or sanctioning of Russia for that matter - this is about EU journalists being sanctioned for reporting in good faith.


Time to protect citizens from EU human right and political abuses, too.


It's nice that it should be a non-event for users.


The mitigation is applying the security patch, using static IPv6 addresses, or using a userspace client like dhcpcd.


The funny/sad detail is that the 80s (at the latest) already solved the problem. Have a look as XDR and Sun RPC. It has both strongly typed APIs and versioning built in. You would have to come up with your authentication mechanism for applications e.g. have them send a cookie file (descriptor).


Any fixed sized bitstring has an obvious natural ordering, but since they're allocated randomly they lack the density and locality of sequential allocation.


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