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> 504MiB shared L3 cache

What CPU are they using here?


The exact CPU depends on the region/cloud provider, but this Granite Rapids CPU is representative: https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/products/sku/240777/...

Thanks!

If you kill someone when drunk driving you face more serious consequences than if you weren't drunk. There should be similar consequences here you get a disease you could have vaccinated for? You pay 4 times the amount for the cure.

You should also pay more for school fees to cover additional insurance when the school gets sued for letting voluntary unvaccinated child attend who infects another child, who couldn't get vaccinated for legitimate medical reasons.

Should there be similar consequences for the people killed due to wasted health care resources? Or family members affected by an alcoholic?

What about smokers and second hand smoke?


At least in certain countries there are high taxes on cigarettes and alcohol probably also to cover such costs

Germany is incredibly under developed in the digitalization plus the amount of red tape to do even basic things is also very large as well. Getting rid of these things takes a lot of will power and at the moment there is very little.

Well from my experience on a Mac or in iOS you either adapt to their workflow or you leave the platform, I don't think there's a middle ground there. From my experience Linux is actually on the total opposite side, which might be even more confusing: it will allow you to create any workflow you want, if you are willing to sacrifice your sanity to get there. Btw Linux user here who already lost part of their mental health.

> Any other operation will be written on paper in a step by step well phrased manner.

Same exact experience, I cannot get my parents to think about what they are doing, they just follow the steps; if an icon changes or if the button is in a different place the whole workflow stops until I help them. Any suggestions here on how to improve the approach?


Avoid jargon/technical language, show practical steps and tell them what to avoid doing on the new system. (Last bit is important. I like to play around with new things to get to know them, but you need to avoid anything which crashes the system, erases etc.)

Probably yes at least to a certain level. At the moment to many countries are relying too heavily on a single point of failure, there should be independent alternatives so that is possible to have more and better competition and in case the administration of the current single point of failure goes nuts it's possible to switch over to something else.

I had a couple of Pis that I wanted to use as a Media center, I always had some small issues that created a suboptimal experience. Went for a regular 2nd hand amd64 with a small form factor and never looked back, much better userspace support and for my use case a much smoother experience, no lags no memory swapping and if needed I can just buy a different memory bank or a different component. I have no plans to use a raspberry pi any time soon. I am not sure these days if they really still have a niche to fill and if yes how large this niche is.

Why cannot cloudlflare just apply a filter to the incoming requests and if the IP is belongs to am Italian AS they just drop it?


And if they can, can they please add my IP to that list as well.


If I could I'd retire tomorrow, I have so many projects I would like to take on, I have the feeling I could fill 3 lives with them: gardening, learning math, system programming, wine tasting, carpentry, sport, traveling etc... There are *so* many interesting things to do and so little time. I guess time will tell but at the moment I have a hard time imagining myself getting bored.


In my old age I'm learning that this is rare. I take my projects for granted, because I guess I'm just very creative, I have way more "projects" than I have days remaining. But it seems like most people have no projects, and nothing in their lives but watching television, playing video games, or doom scrolling.


Yeah, my main worry about retirement is that I’ll spend all my money on tools and projects.


That's going to be the main problem for me heirs: where do all the tools go :)


My dad has developed an unhealthy addiction to buying used agricultural equipment and machine tools. He's been busy importing them to his rural farm. I have no idea how we'll clear that up once he's gone!

He's not a farmer. Just a farm tool collector.


me -> my


Not to knock you specifically, but I know a lot of people who say that they have no time for this stuff waste a ton of time watching TV and doom scrolling.

I try remind myself of this with the Bukowski poem 'air and light and time and space': https://allpoetry.com/poem/14326888-air-and-light-and-time-a...


It's about scale, when you built something as grand as google you don't want to spend time building a garden


For some people that's the case. For others after working on something so large they want to do something small that is wholly theirs.


Could at least try building a bigger garden!


for me, it would be bread and cheese making (easier cheese varieties), vegetable fermentation, more cooking of various cuisines including indian ones, drawing and painting, carpentry, permaculture (i did organic gardening earlier, which is a subset), wood carving (done some before), and maybe tailoring (making clothes, by hand or by sewing machine, for own use).

only a few at a time, of course, maybe only two, and by rotation. and then maybe i would narrow it down to two or three for long term.

would try to make money from a few of them too.


Arguably Sergey should have just gotten into Sourdough.


And Larry should have been a pageboy.


Same here. It's no a big surprise that the article is addressed to CEOs which are usually the embodiment of workaholism.


In general the S-Bahn in Munich is a massive s*t show I can report more info about this if needed. However, in the S1 going to the airport (the train you took) it is quite well described that the train splits and it's both on German and in English.


The Munich S-Bahn is usually a delight compared to the Paris suburbian RER.


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