A bigger problem I think would be someone discovering a pre-auth 0day in the code. So the important thing would be to not allow the entire internet unrestricted access to whatever's running the SSH server.
It's pretty much the UN concentration-camp conspiracy theory that rightwing nutters have been pushing for decades, except that now it's their guys doing it so it's all OK.
Yup. It's so bad that the cURL folks famously stopped accepting AI-generated reports because they were drowning in slop. So the post, which incidentally also looks AI-generated, is praising its ability to generate slop.
Another thing with these success stories is that they often target old, incredibly crufty code bases which are practically guaranteed to have vulns in there somewhere, so you'll always get one or two wins in amongst the avalanche of slop. It'd be interesting to see how well this does against standard SAST benchmarks.
Intel has been making GPUs since the early 1980s, starting with the 82720, or the 82716 if you want to be picky and require a pure-Intel design. They announce a new GPU effort every few years, at about the time it's clear that the previous one has failed.
Again being picky, in theory their integrated graphics are a "success" in that they sell well, but that's because vendors get them for free with the CPU and so don't have to go through the expense of adding a discrete one.
I mean, they're a success in that even a weak discrete GPU is extremely overkill for the majority of people who just want to browse. You can only integrate that kind of card into another chip because the overhead of adding IO and another PCB is just too high for such a weak GPU.
Oh, absolutely, 99% of users and particularly business users don't need a gaming-grade GPU so the Intel one is fine.
Just for a laugh I once tried playing a 10-15 year old game on a recent Intel GPU. It was pretty dire, many seconds between frame updates. It took me several minutes just to get out of the game because it took so long to respond to keypresses.
Not necessarily. I've got a sidebar taking up otherwise unused space on this way-too-wide screen that shows memory usage, CPU usage, network traffic, top processes, hardware temps, and a pile of other useful stuff. It's incredibly useful to be able to glance over and see what's going on under the hood if something appears slow, or hung, or other odd things are happening.
Well I dunno, if you need to attach a car to the roof of your garage to work on the transmission and you've run out of duct tape this seems like the perfect solution.
I have some generic Sharp calculator with an apparently-immortal battery and a nice multiline display. It has all sorts of fancy functions that I never use. Apart from that, everything the OP said.
Domain Specific Language - It's a fairly common acronym I feel like. SQL is a DSL, so is CSS, Rust macros lets you create DSLs, for example. The opposite is General Purpose, like Python, JavaScript
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