Local and international. Just not from the US.
Where Canada really needs to make that happen is cars.
Local and international. Just not from the US.
Where Canada really needs to make that happen is cars.
Again. Impeachment by who?
That failed twice already and that was back when we all thought Congress was an independent branch of government.
You need to, at the very least, get rid of Mike Johnson before you can even dream of getting rid of Trump. But even that still leaves the Senate. Have you compared your views on legislative oversight to those of Tom Cotton?
And see the SCOTUS decision on presidential immunity for their thoughts on judicial oversight.
Removed by who?
The legislative and judicial branches have voluntarily subjugated themselves to the executive.
Nobody has the power to remove him except via an election. And that did not work out too well last time.
To continue Mandriva development (same as OpenMandriva does).
Mandriva started as Mandrake Linux in the 90s. It was a Red Hat Linux alternative built for polish and performance. It was compiled for Pentium when Red Hat was still built for 386. Back in the day, it was popular and well respected.
Mandrake Linux was corporately backed in France and that company merged with Connectiva out of Brazil to create the Mandriva distro.
When Mandriva failed as a company, many of the devs continued the distro as Mageia.
Some of the original Mandriva devs later started the OpenMandriva project to make the naming even more confusing. But Mageia actually came first.
So it is mostly a distro that exists for historical reasons and as an established community. As for where it shines now, I am not sure.
I am hardly suggesting that this chip is competitive but the article is too hard on it.
In particular, this chip inherits the existing RISC-V ecosystem. The article mentions that it runs Linux and it will be well supported by compilers like GCC and Clang. If there is a niche where it fits, this chip could be put to use right away.
There are many, many applications that do not need the most powerful or even the most efficient chips.
Reliability and longevity of supply are often the most important criteria. I notice that the Indian government describes this chip as “reliable”.
At the right price and with a bit of government support, you could build a domestic industry around this thing (or future versions).
Well, you could also count packages in most Linux repos. You would reach the same conclusions.
Or, you could look at licenses on GitHub. The same story is repeated there.
I take it this collides with your assumptions?
Sucks to stop getting the new stuff. But with DKMS, sticking with 580 does not seem too terrible.
I have been waiting so long for this.
What is keeping it out of tree though? Can we not create a community driver that talks to the NVIDiA open source stuff?
It would be best to get all the Open Source stuff into the kernel even if users are going to pair it with the proprietary blob from NVIDIA.
Venezuela is a test. If the world does not stop them, Canada is next.
Has anybody seen that World War II movie? They do a pretty good job of this storyline in that.
You know what country has the most advanced infrastructure specifically designed to process Canadian heavy crude. That would be the United States.
PP does not stand for anything. Only his own career.
Even selling out to his big business supporters is quite secondary.
To borrow a phrase from another post, having his political opponents “foaming at the mouth” is his only real metric of success. His populist playbook is based entirely on the idea that, to win the race, it does not matter at all how fast you go, as long as the other guys never finish. Obstruction and upset is the only tool he understands. His “plans” are cherry picked mimicry or polling selections. As he is neither for or against anything deeply, everything he says is “deceipt”, even when he does not explicitly intend it to be. He does not care what he is saying, only what other people think about it. If that changes, so will he.
The Canadian boycott Is succeeding beyond all expectations.
Travel especially but also food. Jim Beam is ceasing operations at one of their plants and the Canadian boycott is a major factor.
Are Canadians still invested too much in US tech. Yes. As is the entire world.
The one area I would love to see things ramp up is cars. If Canadians stopped buying US manufactured cars, that would really make a difference.
And while I cannot imagine what you think Carney has to do with banks being some of the biggest businesses in Canada, this is one of the success stories of Canadian sovereignty. Canadian banks bought US assets for pennies on the dollar in 2008. Same for Canadian real estate players. If things continue as they are, they may get a chance to do it again.