I… I know they made colorful iMacs… But… What was the marketing idea behind this ad?
What did they mean by “No artificial colors” for a computer…?
I… I know they made colorful iMacs… But… What was the marketing idea behind this ad?
What did they mean by “No artificial colors” for a computer…?
Both GNU and GrapheneOS have staunch requirements and will accept no compromises.
This is a situation where their requirements don’t align, so they’ll never reach an agreement.
GrapheneOS, for example, is also strictly against making the Fairphone line of phones a little more secure because it doesn’t meet all of their security requirements
In this case GNU won’t certify GrapheneOS as fully open because it includes binaries that aren’t open
The FSF is more along your line of improving the situation where they can
If an attacker gets access to your system, they will be able to ensure you can’t get rid of their access
It will persist across operating system installs
However, this requires them to get access first
Well, a.out doesn’t make much sense these days.
Gotta move to .elf
It looks like an alternative to LocalSend rather than Syncthing
Yeah, that’s bizarre. I’d never have guessed /home was created by tmpfiles
Starting with the iPhone 14, they put the last generation processor in the non-pro and the current generation processor in the pro
The weird thing here is that the 15 non-pro (the new processor from the 14 gen - A16) has a faster NPU than the M1 processor that does support the AI feature
The only possible technical reason is because they put such an anemic amount of RAM in their phones. Otherwise it’s entirely an artificial limitation
Running top of the line models does require a lot of RAM, so it’s not an entirely ridiculous theory.
The one I run on my desktop needs at least 12 gigs of VRAM
Sure. I just think this might be the first time that the current iPhone would be missing a feature on the next iOS update
I’d guess most iPhone 15 owners would have assumed their phone was new enough for the feature
One thing to note is that they announced Apple intelligence is only coming to the iPhone 15 Pro/Pro Max for their iOS release
That’s probably why he was salivating at hiring all their developers when the OpenAI board members fired the CEO
For your analogy, you can’t put more water in a sponge that is completely saturated
Trying to compress a compressed file doesn’t really work - at least not for a meaningful gain in storage size with zip, bzip, 7zip, gzip, xz, lzma…
They’re already using HEIC/HEIF
I would be disappointed if they’re compressing it even more on iCloud. You can’t generally meaningfully compress a compressed file
I’d disregarded compression as a possibility because the wording is “full resolution photos and videos are safely stored in iCloud”
I never made that claim, my man
I just wanted some more information about how the on-device database corruption led to restoring pictures
Those are generally opposites
On spinning disks, it’s significantly easier to restore data after a delete, but it’s not normally as easy on flash storage like they’re using
The article specifically states that iCloud wasn’t related to the bug
E.g. iCloud says it’s using 13.4 GiB to store photos, Settings -> General -> iPhone Storage says I can save 15.5 GiB because they’re backed up on iCloud, and if I use idevicebackup2 to pull everything off the phone, there are 21.7 gigs of photos
I’m wondering if these discrepancies are related to the photo app not actually deleting pictures from the filesystem
Sure, an index makes sense for quick search, but I’m confused why deleting it wouldn’t remove it from the filesystem too
Is that why iPhones seem to have no idea how much disk space they’re using?
I’d still like a deeper dive into how database corruption led to data restoration
It seems like deleting a photo must just be removing the entry from the SQLite database, and not actually deleting the photo?
If it used to be a valid website, and is now a scam, that’s a mole worth whacking - even if they’ll try again with a previously unknown url
All the “portless iPhone” rumors have seemed unlikely because of DFU mode.
If they can now enter DFU wirelessly from the initial bootloader in silicon, they might actually be close to a portless iPhone