That's a BSOD for DRM failures I think, not a generic BSOD like on Windows.
Regalia
Assuming you mean texting style acronyms, yeah, we have them in German and I'd assume in other languages too.
Alongside the stuff borrowed from English 1:1, there's stuff like bb for "Bis bald" (See you soon) or hdl for "hab dich lieb" (Love you)
I'd assume other languages do the same out of efficiency or laziness.
What? I thought Nvidia didn't want to mainline the open driver??
Edit: Grrrr, clickbait. This is not about their open driver but as far as I understood about exposing a more minimal driver for vGPU usage, in light of development of Nova, a Rust based nouveau successor.
Are we really going to start this pointless discussion again? They are two licenses with different use cases and different considerations. GPL has a lot more mental overhead to using it, MIT is hands off, both of these aren't inherently invalid.
Also Tanenbaum in your own link mentions that Intel probably would have just written their own microkernel if need be.
Yeah, it's a technically difficult problem to deal with because you're probably often sharing an IP address or a block of IPs with bad actors. You can't really share details about it without giving them a hand.
I guess cynically said, you could probably go through their VPN service to fix it, I've seen that from time to time.
Essentially, their entire schtick is being a middleman. By sitting between the server you want to visit, they can do helpful things like DDOS protection, being a CDN (basically store website assets closer to you), managing HTTPS for you and providing access to your website over IPv6 even if your server doesn't have it.
By nature of that though, their position is quite sensitive since it has become a service that a good chunk of the Internet goes through. That causes concerns about centralization and pisses in a lot of people's cereals politically.
I have a eating disorder so most vegetables make me retch, so I kind of don't have a choice.
Also companies do way more emissions than I ever will, yet I'm asked to stop.
They take cracked games and compress their size down so that shipmates with low bandwidth can download them easier.
How do you imagine such a appeal process would work? If we're assuming distributed moderation doesn't work for appeals, you'd have to appoint moderators who have the (potentially absolute) power to decide on appeals. Who watches the watchers?
I mean, I'm young and I have a full on digital collection of albums on my drive.
I don't like mixtapes for regular listens because I might like the songs in the album if I like one song already.
I do like mixes if I just want to listen to a specific kind of music.
I'm not sure if you're joking or not, but the behavior of journald is fairly dynamic and can be configured to an obnoxious degree, including compression and sealing.
By default, the size limit is 4GB: