We're talking about a laptop here, which most definitely doesn't contain an overclockable i9 K processor.
The 80 character line limit is making it's return (for me it never left though).
Exactly, as long as pretty much everyone I know uses Gmail, there's really no way to keep your emails away from Google. Encrypted mail would be an option, but it is such a hassle to set up for most people.
> CPU scheduling is integrated with messaging. So QNX messaging is implemented in kernel space? I never really understood why kdbus was rejected from Linux, it seems to only have advantages compared to a user space…
We're talking about a laptop here, which most definitely doesn't contain an overclockable i9 K processor.
The 80 character line limit is making it's return (for me it never left though).
Exactly, as long as pretty much everyone I know uses Gmail, there's really no way to keep your emails away from Google. Encrypted mail would be an option, but it is such a hassle to set up for most people.
> CPU scheduling is integrated with messaging. So QNX messaging is implemented in kernel space? I never really understood why kdbus was rejected from Linux, it seems to only have advantages compared to a user space…