

The CMOS battery only maintains the data in the bios’ volatile memory and runs the RTC when the system has no power, it is completely out of the picture when data is being read from said volatile memory.
The CMOS battery only maintains the data in the bios’ volatile memory and runs the RTC when the system has no power, it is completely out of the picture when data is being read from said volatile memory.
It is a CPU vulnerability, so while the researchers used QEMU for their example, it is not necessarily specific to it.
I don’t watch videos with elements of the thumbnail clearly AI generated
I mean if it saves effort on job hunting it can’t be worse (linkedin is AWFUL)
This is the hollywood level tomfoolery every black hat strives for (i hope) lmao
They didn’t have ultrasonic microphones at the dawn of computation
finn is linuxmemes moderator
The article addresses that in a footnote
The only drives I have ever had fail were WD and sandisk (sandisk especially, good GOD never buy flash from sandisk)
Never change, Phoronix comments section
URI parsing is hell
Having an adblocker and whitelisting a website you want to benefit from ad revenue are not mutually exclusive.
No shade against you, but WINE stands for “WINE is not an emulator”
“no features in RCs” is a very basic rule, this was a forgone conclusion. If these features were so integral to data integrity, he should have kept bcachefs out of the kernel until they were ready.
A modern TV is a really bad example. Most modern gaming computer monitors have grey-to-grey pixel response times measured in nanoseconds. I would not be surprised if that exceeds the fade-time of CRT phosphors.