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That’s not a MSRP. You can’t compare a deal to MSRP.
That’s not a MSRP. You can’t compare a deal to MSRP.
What’s the point of your schema if the receiving end is JavaScript, for example? You can convert a string to BigNumber, but you’ll get wrong data if you’re sending a number.
US has plenty of open source devs and they need access to hardware to test their software.
It’s a MIPS CPU. There’s no point comparing it to x86.
Bundle List Price: $498.99
Not even close.
You shouldn’t compare retail prices with deals. Go compare it to AMD MSRP.
Why are you so ignorant?
Well, the issue is that JSON is based on JS types, but other languages can interpret the values in different ways. For example, Rust can interpret a number as a 64 bit int, but JS will always interpret a number as a double. So you cannot rely on numbers to represent data correctly between systems you don’t control or systems written in different languages.
Yaml is cancer.
What that means is that you cannot rely on numbers in JSON. Just use strings.
Well, apart from float numbers and booleans, all other types can only be represented by a string in JSON. Date with timezone? String. BigNumber/Decimal? String. Enum? String. Everything is a string in JSON, so why bother?
No, that’s the other way round. You either have high CPU load and low memory, or low CPU load and high memory.
The software is getting heavier because content, not code. Again, we can look at the games. Take some old games like GTA V or Skyrim, they will fly on modern high end machines! Now add mods with 8K textures, higher definition models, HDR support, etc and these old games will bend over your RTX4090.
That’s about what my Slack is using, while being written in Electron, lol. Oh, you people…
I guess you live in a country with loads of spare IP addresses. Here in the UK they change every few days and IPs get rotated between all ISPs, so you can’t even deduct which ISP I’m using. And sometimes my IP is not even a mainland UK IP, but some weird shit from across the world, because Empire, lol.
You can simply do battery swaps. Plane refueling already requires heavy machinery and industrial scale. I bet battery swaps will be faster than refueling.
Your IP changes all the time, it doesn’t matter. The best someone can deduct from your IP is the country.
The point is that MPV will use shitloads of memory too.
Ah ok. Well, I guess it’s just a slow emulation, but we won’t know for sure until someone runs some benchmarks.