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Because TeamViewer will set up a port forwarding and a NAT traversal for you.
VNC and RDP only work when your host has a public IP, or you know how to set up a proxy.
Because TeamViewer will set up a port forwarding and a NAT traversal for you.
VNC and RDP only work when your host has a public IP, or you know how to set up a proxy.
It’s the Secret Service of Ukraine. Dissidents don’t join the Secret Service in the first place, and the people ‘purged’ got treason charges.
No one does firing squad nowadays. It’s either poison or defenestration.
RISC-V is not proprietary enough.
So if I’m developing a garage door opener using ESP32 RISC-V module, I’m not a RISC-V developer? The dev tools and the cross-compiler only come in x86_64 variant, they simply won’t work on RISC-V laptop. But at least they provide a Linux installer.
The only use case I can think of is to build Debian packages on a target architecture without cross-compilation, because many packages do not support cross-compilation, but it’s more an issue of poor build scripts.
Targeting developers is, I dunno, misses the audience. It would have been a great netbook, or a Raspberry Pi replacement.
If I develop something for Risc-V arch, it is probably some embedded thing with 100 MHz CPU and 2 Mb RAM, and I am cross-compiling it anyway on my more powerful PC.
That’s what the asteroid belt is for!
I first used Matplotlib 10 years ago. It was unintuitive and very slowly redrawing the whole plot each time you tried to zoom.
I’m using it right now, and I’m happy to report that it kept to it’s time-honored tradition - zoom is still piss-slow even on my fancy new PC with 12 cores.
Maybe in the next 20 years, matplotlib devs will discover wonders of tile cache.
It was so simple for Google to add desktop mode to Android during Android 5 times. And they even had Android TV as a mouse-oriented hardware. And they could populate Play Store with quality opensource Linux desktop apps, by just organizing the work, there’s currently no technical reason why Krita or Gimp couldn’t be built for Android natively, it’s just that no one cares to do it after Google ignored Android desktop mode for ten years.
Nope. They don’t care about privacy, as long as there’s no lawsuit.
I guess someone could cross-compile a bunch of desktop Linux apps like Gimp or Krita and publish them to Play Store to run on Chromebooks. There was some work on porting Wayland to Android, there’s also X server on Android although it’s unmaintained, and all other libraries like QT and GTK can be cross-compiled with some effort on top of Bionic.
Subway that arrives almost to my office. Yes it’s a bit slower overall, but I can doomscroll my phone for a hour per day instead of rotating the wheel for the same amount of time.
Samyang noodles are okay, I just add a bit more water than specified on the packaging.
Beware that you need to boil the noodles for 3 minutes, they are not instant.
I’ve had problems with KDE on Wayland on Debian 12, it fails when entering sleep mode with multiple monitors. Thankfully, KDE on X is just one package install away, and it works with no bugs.
Debian 12. It just works, except for buggy Wayland, thankfully KDE still supports Xorg.
No luck eh.
Play Store link?
Nope, the lemmy-cached thumbnail has a different picture
Because military engineers overengineer these things from the most expensive materials available, and they also perform frequent maintenance on them, which is also expensive.
You can listen to FM radio with gqrx relatively easily, if you can navigate through hundreds of input boxes.
sudo apt-get install gqrx
Anything more complicated will require some coding knowledge, unless someone already created a library for that specific thing.
There is also a ready-made package to listen to GPS signal, unfortunately it needs an external amplifier and a proper antenna, because RTL-SDR is not sensitive enough for GPS.