Postal service PostNL uses them, so I happen too see them from time to time.
Flexitarian bicycle commuter (he/him) from the Netherlands.
My Pixelfed account on Pixey.
Postal service PostNL uses them, so I happen too see them from time to time.
Sorry, when crossposting I should have edited the title to be better one than the title used in the OP and in the article itself.
The former. The other comment was referencing the video game “Fallout: New Vegas” (in which a character states that that is how he got a job in the USA’s last functional power plant (but has no clue at all and basically admits to the main character that he lied to recruiters).
TL/CCFL kind of ruined that simplicity already.
Fallout (the original) 2 had one but not the one posted here.
Edit: I was misremembering which one
The Guardian cannot spell “Mastodon”, it seems from this “article”.
Just make sure it’s not addicted to crack.
Sorry, I meant “not in the wild”. “Captivity” might not have been the best word to pick (second language).
A nyala, according to other comments and as confirmed by Wikipedia.
I suspect the one on the photo lives in captivity.
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You forgot about ditching more of the chipset etc. in favour of integrating everything into the CPU die.
Some SBCs only boot from said SD card though, while some do support more robust media. However, too many images are presuming you boot from SD which is a pita.
With or without Das Uboot, they still rely on board specific firmware (even Uboot is customised for many boards to make it work). OSes that state they do support aarch64, often require to have UEFI on your system so no way they are gonna boot on e.g. your Raspberry Pi.
Add to that, that is unlikely that browsers compiled for arm64 will have feature parity with their x86-64 counterparts. Goodbye Digitale Rights Management, and with that goodbye services like Tidal or Spotify (unless you run an OS that is still supported by their apps).
Seems of the size right for that type of computer (luggable).
I love how the only thing betraying in what era this photo was taken, are the Nike shoes.
It kind of makes sense on many BIOS/UEFI-less systems where e.g. Uboot is used. And it does contain things like kernel images, sometimes initRD files etc. (which may not be bootloader files but are still system boot files).
I see. BTW, I never figured out the details either, but wanted to bring matters up anyway in case it still would be considered useful.
It did when it was still called Calckey, but around the time of the rebranding their main server got into issues (Kainoa, the previous maintainer, was messing around with it to improve performance but that just broke things).
Same here.