

Look up elsewhere about the reputation Brother has with compatibility. Personal experience: never fails. That’s their jam.


Look up elsewhere about the reputation Brother has with compatibility. Personal experience: never fails. That’s their jam.


Trust me. It is.


This has more details: https://wiki.gnome.org/Projects/GnomeKeyring/SecurityFAQ


The security model skews towards convenience versus absolute security, meaning automation is it’s goal, not perfect security. They use a reasonable amount of security to protect unauthorized access, meaning untrusted apps can’t access keys by default, and container apps only have selective access. AppArmor is supposed to be handling some DBUS interactions in the background to prevent any old app from grabbing everything, but again, automation is the purpose here.
If you don’t have a reasonably trusted system, then sure, it’s about as secure as any other password manager. I remember reading some time ago there was a plan to make a global framework for trusted application.accessnto things like this, but it was shot down for being “oppressive” in the same way as Microsoft’s trust app mess.
Ideally there would be an advanced mode where each app is granted access to specific keys, and that interaction is controlled by the user. This would never be the default obviously as the user interaction would be an insane annoyance to people who don’t care.


It’s enough to build a pattern match and scan against it being elsewhere. Surely they did at least much to find all these packages with malware.


They should have some sort of static code scanners on the repos at rest at this point that look for certain patterns and issue warnings.
Apparently they can’t do beaver dams correctly. Why this person chose to accept this slop is confusing.


VMs were not viable yet in 2001 for an entire underlying OS stack like this in the way you might be thinking on end-user hardware. I think VMWare was just coming out, and Xen wasn’t released until a bit later.


F this dude


If there is a single SGI device still in use on the planet, I would be shocked.


Install powertop and run (with sudo) to see what’s consuming power. Use the tunables tab for suggestions on what can turned on or off.
You’re on AMD, so your CPU scheduler should using the amd-pstate-epp module to handle power profile settings. Turn your power profile to power saving and see if your temps go down. Move up to balanced from there and see how that is.
You sure you haven’t over locked anything? Try setting defaults in your BIOS.
Pic of your case and components couldn’t hurt. You might just have an airflow issue


Just install Asahi or Fedora and get your speed back.


M1&2 are pretty much fully implemented in Asahi.


Good thing almost all flavors of Linux run flawlessly on the x86 models.


Is this a bot? These can’t be real responses…


The currently existing infrastructure for standard datacenters with normal capacity for heating and cooling are just fine for basic computer and storage.
All the new outfits builds are being built very specifically for inference compute, which they are only doing because it’s less hassle than retrofitting existing facilities, and they think they can trick/screw taxpayers into footing the bill if new facilities are built.
It’s a scam from top to bottom.


Ban all new datacenters as fast as possible and shut this shit DOWN
No gaming distro outperforms any other distro by any measurable means a user would notice.
Yeah, this should just be a series of build arguments.