My Organic maps has a download screen for the maps which regularly update outside of the app itself.
FLOSS virtualization hacker, occasional brewer
My Organic maps has a download screen for the maps which regularly update outside of the app itself.
I think you underestimate how much storage those tiles take up compared to the vector map data.
The data updates are handled separately in app
Won’t it? I thought you just needed to enable the apps you want. My fdroid AntennaPod is certainly usable in it.
I write assembly for test cases and early setup code. I read far more assembly than I write.
For range it doesn’t add much in most cases. But it also depends on how long between journeys you have. If you’re traveling in a van and you are going to be stationary for a few weeks at a time then it can start to make sense, maybe with an extra fold out.
You can, they are called canals. Look at the Nile delta and the network of irrigation trenches used to spread water from the river to the wider areas. There are a number of dam projects in Africa which are all about managing water flows.
The principle problem is when your divert water it’s usually at a cost to another area that was using it.
Self hosting takes time and energy and most open source developers join projects because they are interested in the project not becoming admins. On top of that building a CI system is an expensive undertaking when a lot of hosting solutions provide a fair amount of compute for free to qualifying projects.
I’m not sure if that is the op or Lemmy cropping stuff. I’ve seen similar when I’ve tried to post stuff.
There are even some reading guides depending on what sub-genre you are interested in if you don’t want to read the whole cannon. They all standalone pretty well though.
The ISA may be open but I’m pretty sure the microarchitecture will be totally proprietary. Even with a kick ass microarchitecture they may still struggle if they can’t use the latest process nodes to actually manufacture the chips.
Having said that I suspect the main challenge RISCV is going to face is the software ecosystem. That stuff can take a decade to build and requires a degrees of cooperation between all the companies building chips.
This seems like an excellent idea and hopefully provides a model for other media outlets to follow.
Oh I don’t mind it too much but I have a rich shell history 😀
Certainly when using the newer options things are more consistent easy to follow. However it’s reputation for complexity isn’t underserved because Qemu is very flexible in what it can do.
Libvirt/qemu with either virt-manager or cockpit to control them. Alternatively there are various wrapper projects for qemu that hide the complex command line from you.
I’ve heard of people waking up with accents but I’m not sure I’ve seen any cases where they speak an unfamiliar language fluently.
Maybe it would be better titled track of the year?
Do albums have a connective theme between the tracks compared to say a collection of hit singles?
I’m currently reading Chip Wars and according to the author there were other companies trying to build EUV machines. It seems a lot of them shelved the plans after having ploughed a lot of money into research. ASML stayed the course and bet big on it paying off, which it looks like it has.
I’m an August baby so was the youngest of my cohort going into uni and while I’ve done ok I do wonder if I’d have done a bit better academically if I hadn’t been so distracted by all the other things on offer to a independent 18 year old.
Very binary, much wow.