The difference now should be the precision with which they can be distributed behind enemy lines, without the risk of any lifes.
The difference now should be the precision with which they can be distributed behind enemy lines, without the risk of any lifes.
I’ve been working on that exact problem for the last couple weeks. My solution for now is rt patch and a dedicated cpu core for rt tasks. This already works pretty reliable, but I notice small delays from time to time. I gather from the article that my problem might be page swapping. I don’t know how to improve that, yet.
Also for anybody working on rt problems: I highly recommend the stress-ng
tool for stress testing and finding bottlenecks of your system.
Why did HDMI succeed over display port? Always the same problems with closed source.
Please make this a thing that is happening!
Are they gonna give Twitter more money then? /s
This has to be more widely known! They pay less taxes because of your donation!
We get participation trophies because we can’t win at life anymore.
I think from the technical point of view, it should be possible for users to merge multiple communities into one. I think the git software could be a great template for achieving this. The admins of each community would only be responsible for their instance of the community. The same merging could apply to comments.
The big challenge however would be to automate this into a seemless experience for the user. If the goal is to attract more users, the user experience has to be on a tiktok level of simplicity.
An additional problem, where I don’t have an answer yet is: What is supposed to happen if two communities start in the same way, but develop into different directions?
Edit: Seeing the new comments: I like the social approach of admins coming together and collaborating in a single community even more. But it would still be nice, if a community could be hosted on multiple instances at once, for redundancy.
Is this a good or a bad thing?
Does this mean you have to use apt-get to get the deb version again? Or is there an even more complicated command? I’m wondering what happens for the other Ubuntu flavors. I’m usually running Kubuntu.