“nVidia Cares” sounds like something that belongs in the “Post Something Funny” thread. WOW I didn’t think two people could take that big of a dump in just one video, but those two sure managed to.
Did I call it the other day when I posted MS compels you to upgrade?
I agree with the writer. W12 would likely fully require an NPU. Or at least for enhanced AI capabilities would need a NPU.
https://www.pcmag.com/news/i-dug-through-windows-12-rumors-these-are-the-features-im-betting-on#
MS seems to be trying to kill Windows IMO. It seems the latest patches seem to brake more. Anyway here is the Xbox pc hybrid, they want full W11 on it.
@Edward78 please post no further conspiracy theory artificially narrated slop on the Garuda tech thread. The content of the video is mostly politically motivated click bait nonsense, but the most painful part was listening to the pathetic electronically generated voice narrating the video.
Can you seriously not recognize the fact that the narrators voice is created by an electronically generated text to speech synthesizer? All these text to speech generated videos make YouTube almost unwatchable these days. Anytime I hear an electronically synthesized English voice over on any YouTube video, I immediately know I have opened nothing but clickbaity garbage, or thinly veiled advertising solely created to generate revenue.
It is almost impossible to find legitimate product reviews on YouTube these days because of all this garbage permeating the internet. Please don’t post anymore of this junk trying to pass itself off as a legitimate news story on the Garuda forum.
I would appreciate if you would delete the link with “Pentagon” in the title on your last post. We do not appreciate those types of videos on our forum, so please refrain from posting this type of drivel in the future.
Ok, China vid. is gone.
If only ALL of Microsoft would burn to the ground that would be simply FANTASTIC.
We’ll call it a blue screen of death. ![]()
Seems like AI is just getting more and more dangerous every day. Especially infuriating when it comes in the form of new “features” you never opted in to.
Oops, wrong topic, please move to Linux and Tech News. This is not funny at all…
Well, I think it’s funny
. I moved it anyway
.
The sooner the AI bubble pops the better ![]()
This time around even if the Asinine Idiot bubble does pop there is no guarantee they’ll lower prices. ESPECIALLY here in the states.
I think Micron has made a bad choice. They supply Nvidia too, so Nvidia could say skrew you to them & go with one of the others. Nvidia told partners to buy memory themselves.
The only problem is, yes it will pop like the .com bust did in early 2000’s, it’s sad part of it is that it will take the rest of the eccomomies around the world with it
Google plans to add a second Gemini-based model to Chrome to address the security problems created by adding the first Gemini model to Chrome.
Suggestion: get rid of “AI”
Simply AhHaHaHaHaHaHaHaHaHaHaHaHaHaHaHaHaHaHaHaHaHaHa they must not realize any sane person removes and or fully blocks Gemini.
Barracuda “Complete threat protection for all size businesses” Networks shines this time with a perfect 10.0 in its RMM solution, and that in a triple pack:
And another highlight in RMM, with a delicate 8.7:
Path traversal!!11!!1! We already laughed about that in the 1990s! ![]()
In case anyone remembers, these are the same cyber clowns who caught funny backdoors on their email “security” gateway appliances two and a half years ago, which could not be patched afterwards and the ESGs had to be scrapped.
When I think cybersecurity, I think Barracuda… ![]()
Libxml2 Becomes Officially Unmaintained After Maintainer Steps Down
Before you think, “So what, it’s just a library,” remember that we’re talking about a core piece of the Linux ecosystem, deeply embedded across infrastructure, desktop environments, programming languages, and security-sensitive workloads. Let me explain.
First, libxml2 is the de facto standard XML and HTML parsing library in the open-source world. It is pulled in by thousands of packages, from low-level system components to high-level applications. Almost all desktop environments depend heavily on it, as do major desktop tools, configuration systems, and document-processing pipelines.
Second, XML parsing is historically one of the most security-sensitive areas in systems programming. Vulnerabilities in XML libraries often lead to remote code execution, entity expansion attacks, information leakage, or denial-of-service issues.
And last but definitely not least, practically all Linux distros ship libxml2 as a core library. Just look at the packages on your system that depend on libxml2, and you’ll see a mile-long list you probably never even knew was there.
It seems he blew this out of context enough to cause the README to be revised:
The issue being magnified here was already resolved last year, which I would love to quote this reply from:
libxml2 has never been safe to use with untrusted input. It doesn’t help to pretend otherwise.
I really don’t like his gaslighting from 7+min. Reminds me how much I don’t like any of his content ![]()