You can buy a $400 900GB HDD, so OPs price gap is actually pretty narrow.
You can buy a $400 900GB HDD, so OPs price gap is actually pretty narrow.
Or just email the account used for registering the part when there’s an update
Kerbal Space Program, for sure. Skyrim is another.
You compete by having your own product, not by using what your competitors developed. It’s on AMD for not making their own product to compete with CUDA
Then it’s on AMD to develop a competing API, and ultimately on them for not being competitive enough to develop an alternative alongside the development of CUDA.
It’s not Nvidia’s fault they developed a better product. And I say this as someone who prefers AMDs products, although I had to get a 3060 for my 3D modeling. I would have loved to go AMD, but I really couldn’t.
AMD needs a suitable alternative to CUDA cores.
Yeah. AI can definitely reduce development costs by handling a lot of the easy busy work for developers.
You can get them from AliExpress for only a few bucks each, although I’ve made the switch to pi pico.
Please remove your suggestion for buying 18650s on Amazon. They are full of counterfeit cells, or rewrapped cells with dangerously inflated specs.
Get lithium cells from a reputable vendor that tests the batches they receive. Illumn and IMR Batteries are two such vendors.
Not surprising at all. I figured that would be the fate of KSP2 once Take Two got ahold of it.
Who the fuck thought a AAA studio had any business releasing an unplayable early access game at retail prices, especially when it’s a sequel to a game with a hardcore cult following?
It was doomed the second they made that decision.
Get one with a remote, then get a smart RF blaster. There’s the Broadlink RM4 that I’ll likely be going with in the future.
Or, you could get an ESP32 and an IR transmitter/receiver and use Esphome. Same concept, but completely local.
Except it is; you can add a batch script in your startup folder to disable it on startup. You could also just add the registry key that disables it.
If you’re actually a power user, disabling updates isn’t an issue.
The problem is when those systems become part of a botnet.
Plus, you can just disable the update service if you want to leave your computer vulnerable to attacks.
What’s the make and model of your server?
Since the server is on an N100 that could very well explain it.
Have you tried changing out ethernet cables and trying different ports?
Also, try hosting the speed test from your laptop and running the speed test from the server to see if the results are reversed.
Make sure you get the right cable or adapter. There are a few different DVI standards, and they’re not all compatible with each other.
Most people have absolutely no need to understand how the systems they use operate under the hood.
If anyone does care to “reach up”, it’s not hard to find the steps to disable it on Google. But 99.9% of people aren’t going to do that.
Those notifications have existed for years. People don’t give a shit.
All you have to do is restart your computer every so often and nothing will be forced.
Likely the same deal with the platter drives too.