Also rust interacts through C Abi with most stuff. So C is still important for it.
Also rust interacts through C Abi with most stuff. So C is still important for it.
CDU is center-right.
They run on them, but its not that easy compared to a web app. Why isn’t everyone programming in machine code? Every other language literally runs on it. There is a reason we use abscractions.
Isnt that the “its not 100% confirmed, so please don’t sue us” word?
Here is a 1440p 120fps HEVC example over wifi. Left screen is my PC. Analyzing it frame by frame it would guess a added delay of 16-32ms on my Galaxy Tab S7, idk how much of that is the response time of the tablet screen. Note this is without the low latency mode which I disabled because I had some frame pacing over wifi with it.
Im streaming over wifi and it says average encode latency 4-7ms depending on the day, but thats just what the software reports. I haven’t had any issues with it.
You can still game stream with sunlight + moonlight. And the advantage is that it works with any brand GPU.
The problem is that this is a spiral. Less users results in less content and smaller communities dying, which in turn leads to less users.
Lemmy isn’t on an upwards trend.
At these speeds it’s like asking a CPU to run cool under workload. Your options are:
Active cooling
Slower speeds
Transistor breakthrough
Simple save the users language setting in a variable, change it to english, check if the first letter is “s” and then change the language back.
Compiling all assets into the binary is trivial in rust. When I have a small web server that generates everything in code I usually compile the favicon into the binary.
There are a lot of solutions like that in rust. You basically compile the template into your code.
I have experience with Vodafone, Deutsche Glasfaser and Unitymedia and they all did it like this. It also might depend on the state.
I can only talk how it is in Germany, where CGNAT with a public IPv6 prefix is the norm and a public IPv4 costs extra money unless you have a legacy contract.
CGNAT usually only applies to the IPv4. The IPv6 prefix you get is usually public.
How? You can literally turn IPv4 off on your whole network, or selectively by device. But if you turn off your IPv4 you will get cut off of a good chunk of the internet.
And the only reason we have unused IPv4’s is because a big part of the internet is behind NAT of some kind like CGNAT.
We have more internet connections than IPv4’s they can’t just pull new ones out of their ass. Also IPv6 is internet too.
Good luck getting a non CGNAT connection here without paying for it. Also it’s not a breach of contract if it’s not in the contract…
The Dyson sphere is pretty effective.