If the goal of Desert Storm was to get Iraq to withdraw out of Kuwait, then it could be considered a success. There was no intent to make friends with the Iraqi people or remove Saddam from power. That was the second Bush’s mess.
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toddestan@lemmy.worldto politics @lemmy.world•Trump Just Lost a War for America — No One's Done That Since Nixon2·5 days ago
Charlie Kirk? I think he’s some podcaster or something like that.
toddestan@lemmy.worldto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is a good age bracket for this pile of trash I found on my land?7·15 days agoI don’t know the exact model of the cassette player, but the silver plastic and the rounded bits of the design to me are very late 90’s to early 2000’s.
My guess is this stuff has only been out there a few years from the general condition.
Newer ones can be a lot more efficient, but the high efficiency ones aren’t just drop-in replacements either because they require additional piping to the outdoors which can be a big issue depending on where in your house the furnace is located.
toddestan@lemmy.worldtoMicroblog Memes@lemmy.world•google is a prison and the enemy of FOSS, we really need an alternativeEnglish1·18 days agoFrom what I’ve seen, VoLTE support is also pretty iffy too.
toddestan@lemmy.worldtoMicroblog Memes@lemmy.world•google is a prison and the enemy of FOSS, we really need an alternativeEnglish2·18 days agoLuckily I’m still at the point where nothing I need to do absolutely requires a smartphone with either iOS or Google Android but it sure feels like that day is coming.
toddestan@lemmy.worldto News@lemmy.world•‘It’s stupid’: why western carmakers’ retreat from electric risks dooming them to irrelevance2·19 days agoIf anything it’s an “ute”.
If you ask me, the top left corner belongs to IBM i.
toddestan@lemmy.worldto linuxmemes@lemmy.world•My PC boots faster than my monitor turns on1·28 days agoEven with turning that on, it seems that many newish motherboards will still sit and putz around for quite some time before finally handing things off to the OS. My guess is there’s little push for speedy boot times (I haven’t really seen this as something that shows up in reviews), so the hardware manufacturers don’t really bother with optimizing for it.
toddestan@lemmy.worldto linuxmemes@lemmy.world•My PC boots faster than my monitor turns on1·28 days agoOn the other hand, if the computer is powered on, there’s wear and tear on the moving parts (mostly just fans now), and components like capacitors have a limited lifespan. These tend to be the first components that fail anyway, and I’ve always thought it odd to further reduce the lifespan of these components with the hope to extend the lifespan of what’s already the most reliable parts of the computer.
Now, with modern computers that sip power at idle but can consume hundreds of watts under load, the difference in temperature at idle and load is much greater than room temperature (off) and idle, so even if I was worried about thermal cycling I’d still be inclined to turn the computer off when it’s not needed because when it’s off there will be no big temperature swings. Granted, with Linux when my PC isn’t being used it pretty much just sits at a constant and steady idle… but Windows on the other hand…
Combined with the added electricity cost of not running the computer when it’s not needed, not leaving the machine running all the time is the obvious choice.
toddestan@lemmy.worldto News@lemmy.world•Massive US refuelling aircraft crashes in Iraq17·28 days agoIt’s a KC-135. A plane designed in the 1950’s, and the plane in the incident was probably built in the early 1960’s. Way before any of Boeing’s current problems.
toddestan@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•‘Devastating blow’: Atlassian lays off 1,600 workers ahead of AI pushEnglish4·28 days agoJira Cloud isn’t just the on-prem version of Jira where you’re forced to use and pay for Atlassian’s hosting, it’s actually a different and much shittier version of the old on-prem Jira. Same goes for other Atlassian products such as Confluence.
It’s no surprise to me that Atlassian is in trouble, as there’s little reason I can see to use their products anymore, and they are just coasting on inertia at this point. Whereas 10 years ago, while it was still fun to knock their stuff, I had to admit they were actually pretty decent.
toddestan@lemmy.worldto Not The Onion@lemmy.world•A Disturbing Clue Suggests Amelia Earhart Survived Her Crash. And Then She Was Eaten by Crabs.English1·1 month agoAt one point not too long ago I realized that all I really knew about her was her mysterious disappearance in the Pacific, so I had to go read up on her. She was actually a pretty interesting person with an impressive number of accomplishments.
It was noticeably faster for external hard drives than USB 2.0 back in the day (though if anything I miss eSATA).
There’s still some Windows XP-era A/V equipment still in use at work that is Firewire.
toddestan@lemmy.worldto politics @lemmy.world•Kamala Harris might run for president again in 2028. Please, no | Arwa Mahdawi31·1 month agoA former president who has served two terms is only barred from becoming the vice president. They could otherwise hold any other position in the line of presidential succession, and would be passed over if something happened to everyone in front of them. Same thing applies to the other conditions for being president such as a natural born citizen, 35 years of age, etc.
toddestan@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•10% of Firefox crashes are caused by bitflipsEnglish1·1 month agoECC memory and server hardware in general is surprisingly cheap if you’re fine buying used gear that’s a few years old. Once that stuff gets old enough that it’s being cycled out of data centers en masse, it hits the used market and the supply often exceeds the limited demand for that kind of stuff.
With that said, I don’t know if that’s true at the moment.
toddestan@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•10% of Firefox crashes are caused by bitflipsEnglish10·1 month agoBit rot is real, I’ve seen it first hand in plenty of cases. While I tend to blame the storage device, for infrequently accessed files that have been copied multiple times across different drives, I can’t rule out RAM or some other source of the corruption.
toddestan@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•10% of Firefox crashes are caused by bitflipsEnglish7·1 month agoPrograms that use more memory could be slightly more susceptible to this sort of thing because if a bit gets randomly flipped somewhere in a computer’s memory, the bit flip more likely to happen in an application that has a larger ram footprint as opposed to an application with a small ram footprint.
I’m still surprised the percentage is this high.
Hence the reason it’s almost certainly fake. Even a 5 year-old could easily rattle off several animals with three letters in them without much thought.
Now if it was something like what animals has only two letters in it, that’s something most people would actually have to think about.
spoiler
My answer: Ox
It may not be completely crazy, depending on context. With something like a web app, if data is being sanitized in the client-side Javascript, someone malicious could absolutely comment that out (or otherwise bypass it).
With that said, many consultant-types are either pretty clueless, or seem to feel like they need to come up with something no matter how ridiculous to justify the large sums of money they charged.