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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 19th, 2023

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  • The bad news is that Android is still likely affected. Similar to Apple’s ImageIO, Android has a facility called the BitmapFactory that handles image decoding, and of course libwebp is supported. As of today, Android hasn’t released a security bulletin that includes a fix for CVE-2023-4863 – although the fix has been merged into AOSP. To put this in context: if this bug does affect Android, then it could potentially be turned into a remote exploit for apps like Signal and WhatsApp. I’d expect it to be fixed in the October bulletin.

    So a no-click device hack?


  • There is a flatpak zoom app. I guess it can be sandboxes somehow. It would most likely not pose any privacy threat outside of zoom.

    But keep in mind that zoom got into it’s privacy policy, that they can record and use for ai anything you do and say during a meeting (if you didn’t allow access to the desktop during the meeting, zoom shouldn’t be able to record it, so most likely won’t matter for that, only what you send through their servers).





  • The article only talks about deployment costs. What about the rest?

    For you a company should just throw away it’s employees to hire inexistent Linux experts or people using Linux software or whatever?

    There is the server side. There I agree that using Linux is great.

    On the client side it can be more complicated. A lot of schools in various domains teach the students how to use the software on windows. Not Linux.

    Furthermore, a company doesn’t pop into existence the moment where it thinks it needs to switch to Linux.

    The company already exists, providing work to the employees, trained on windows. So switching on Linux may change the software if it cannot be used on Linux (not everything is a saas). And that can be a time consuming process for the employees too because they don’t know how to use it efficiently.


  • They can’t really do that, mostly because it’s not “just 1 person”.

    There are a lot of costs going into maintaining the os, apps, custom software, and training for the employees.

    Google is giant, and has a huge amount of money. They can afford to spend the costs of training, modifying software, or developing other software for their needs if it reduces their future costs.

    A smaller company don’t have all those funds, they wouldn’t be able to invest as much into switching to Linux and maintaining the custom software or finding new software and training.

    When people switch to another software, there is also a period of low productivity, when these same people are still discovering the software, and cannot do everything as fast as before. That is also creating additional costs.



  • I don’t know about dual boot. Maybe windows has to be installed first. Never tried it.

    Tho I know that it is possible during the drive choice, in the windows install, to select an empty space, then clic on the create partition, and there creating a sufficiently big enough partition for windows will create 3 partitions : The boot, reserved and windows. Then just select the main windows partition, and it will auto detect the boot and reserved partition.

    However that is happening on an empty drive. I do not know what can happen on a drive where there is already an OS.

    Windows 11 can be used, however a oobe command needs to be input at install, without Internet, to not have to use an online account. Tho windows may ask later to connect with an online account.

    For an alternative, windows may also be used in a VM. There may also be a way to pass through all the main gpu if needed, and switch between Linux / windows. But I didn’t really use it. So I don’t know where it is or what are the steps.

    If the Linux os needs to be used, but the gpu also has to be in the vm, there is a way to split it. Tho the last time I checked (4+ months ago) the project was incompatible with amd due to some kernel/driver stuff. I sadly lost the link to it…



  • Yeah it’s pretty easy to understand that the 84 is the professional reviews. I guess there aren’t just 64 people who put a comment, but 6190 who put a comment (from the image in the post).

    The more professional reviews come out the more the score has a chance to go down compared to the first reviews if they were very high. And give some sort of average.

    However profesional review scores don’t always align to what most users think, as people like different things, but also the users get very much bothered by a bad start. While the reviewers will give a score on the entire game.



  • Do you know how much money Google has? It’s enough to do whatever with that, even just keep the people away from competition.

    Why Google did that or if it’s even true? Not sure.

    However Google is a big tech which develops software for a multitude of platforms, even Linux. They work on their own Linux mod : Android.

    So they have all the people already in the company to do whatever they want on Linux.

    They also have specific needs which may not need windows.

    We however use excel and the advanced feature Power query and power Bi. So as long as a Foss alternative doesn’t get to the level of the current insanely powerful excel and power bi, we’ll be stuck on windows.


  • Do you know how much cost is involved in developing a peace of software?

    Get what you need > a lot of time and good view of the company is needed.

    Then either get a company to do it > expensive + no control on the software.

    Or/

    Make it yourself > extremely expensive + control on the software.

    Get the right people > hiring campaign > expensive

    Then these hired people represent more people to pay each month > expensive.

    If there aren’t right people, you need to teach the devs how to work on it > expensive formations and it’s done on the working time, so double expensive.

    Then time invested in creating the Linux distro adapted to the company > time, testing, mistakes, redo, undo… expensive.

    (let’s not forget about taxes and obligations towards the new workers).






  • That is not true at all.

    Epos “still” has great mics on the h6 pro.

    Corsair has very good mics on the premium headset (virtuoso), and the wired hs80.

    Razer also has a very good mic on the blackshark v2 pro 2023 (not the old one).

    Hyperx has a very good mic on their wired cloud 3.

    Drop x Sennheiser has a good mic on the pc38x.

    Beyerdynamic has a very good mic on their mx300 gen2

    Audio Technica has be best ever mic on a headset currently on the m50xsts (or other with the same mic, not sure if they have other similar ones).

    And all of these mic sound better than what modmic has currently not discontinued.


  • Sure with the budget, space, and maybe even enough noise isolation or when you can get open headphones…

    But how much would a good enough studio headphone cost? Because from what I understand from studio headphones it’s perfectly calibrated headphones?

    Now image your someone without the proper budget to get 1k$ headphones, and no space for open sound. what would you buy?

    Maybe beyerdynamic? But for me the clamp force is too high.

    Akg? They are cheap, but damn it was impossible for me to wear the akg371 as they were too shallow and had no protection for the driver plastic, and the way they were build made sure I had holes for the sound to get out…

    Sadly audio is very subjective, on comfort, space, and sound.