Miscellaneous Tech News
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@dashrender said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
This is where I have zero knowledge. I didn't know how much was kernel stuff versus how much was DLL emulation?
Wine doesn't emulate, it actually makes the DLL's run on the system as designed (granted often with mixed results).
W.I.N.E - Wine is not (an) Emulator
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@dashrender said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@scottalanmiller said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@dashrender said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
How much emulation is needed if they tried moving to the Linux kernel?
If they could keep the Windows Explorer GUI on the Linux Kernel... that would be HUGE.
Quite a bit, but WINE has already done SO much of that work, and Steam has done most of the rest. So while a lot of work is needed, a lot is potentially already done.
And MS has always done the opposite, I would be surprised if Windows Explorer on Linux doesn't exist somewhere inside MS.
This is where I have zero knowledge. I didn't know how much was kernel stuff versus how much was DLL emulation?
DLL is definitely the bulk of it. Kernel emulation tends to not be all that bad. "Tends"....
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@dustinb3403 said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@dashrender said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
This is where I have zero knowledge. I didn't know how much was kernel stuff versus how much was DLL emulation?
Wine doesn't emulate, it actually makes the DLL's run on the system as designed (granted often with mixed results).
W.I.N.E - Wine is not (an) Emulator
Yeah, I know/knew the acronym mean not emulator, but if it's not an emulator, then what is it doing? is it replacing real DLL calls to replacement DLLs that don't require emulation? or whatever Linux uses instead of DLLs?
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@dashrender said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@dustinb3403 said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@dashrender said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
This is where I have zero knowledge. I didn't know how much was kernel stuff versus how much was DLL emulation?
Wine doesn't emulate, it actually makes the DLL's run on the system as designed (granted often with mixed results).
W.I.N.E - Wine is not (an) Emulator
Yeah, I know/knew the acronym mean not emulator, but if it's not an emulator, then what is it doing? is it replacing real DLL calls to replacement DLLs that don't require emulation? or whatever Linux uses instead of DLLs?
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@dustinb3403 OK so translation instead of emulation... not sure that's really better,
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@dashrender said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@dustinb3403 OK so translation instead of emulation... not sure that's really better,
I would consider a translation the most one could do, the people who develop WINE don't have the source code for the programs they are getting to work on Linux.
And the Linux Kernel doesn't have Windows Source code... so there has to be some translation.
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@scottalanmiller That link not working Scott.
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@stuartjordan said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@scottalanmiller That link not working Scott.
Likely fake news. Someone writing about something they didn't understand.
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@obsolesce It looks like it's the actual FQDN thats the issue. Dns Issue they are having.
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@scottalanmiller said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
nearly-all-microsoft-365-customers-have-suffered-email-data-breaches
I googled
nearly-all-microsoft-365-customers-have-suffered-email-data-breaches
and found a link that did work.and yeah.. less than great article in my opinion.
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Reminders on rise as WhatsApp update deadline looms
Users yet to accept new terms and conditions for the messaging platform WhatsApp will start to get "persistent" reminders after the 15 May deadline.
The changes relate primarily to the way businesses interact with customers. Since they were announced, in January, there has been concern about the prospect of increased data sharing with WhatsApp's parent company, Facebook, but this will not be changing. Most of the app's two billion users had already accepted, the company said. Those who do not will start to lose functionality - beginning with being unable to see chat lists and ending with not receiving video calls and messages - but no accounts will be deleted. -
New Executive Order mandates Software Bill of Materials, naming open source specifically.
The executive order recognized the vital importance of open-source software. It reads in part: "Within 90 days of publication of the preliminary guidelines … shall issue guidance identifying practices that enhance the security of the software supply chain." Open-source software is specifically named.
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@dustinb3403 said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Security Researcher discovers plan text passwords used for Microsoft rdp
Clickbait headline. The url is much less alarmist.
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@nadnerb said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Much facepalm ️
Not at all surprised that this occurred. During any sort of forklift operation of IT from one ITSP to another or to move a workload in-house that has historically been hosted that the people setting it up are guaranteed to not know how to setup these new systems up to 100%.
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Scam City: The unlicensed 'forex trader' who lost £3.8 million
In his four-part series, journalist Mobeen Azhar finds out how investors lost millions of pounds after getting caught up in forex - foreign exchange - schemes.
In Autumn 2020, a video clip of a man handing out cash to strangers on Plymouth High Street went viral. "You're an angel," one person in the crowd said. That clip of Gurvin Singh Dyal, a bio-med student, even made the local paper in Plymouth. But in trying to track down the 20-year-old (pictured above), it turned out there were different versions of the story. To many, he was simply handing out money to strangers because he'd made it big in the world of online trading and he wanted to give something back. To others, it was a publicity stunt and there were a string of questions to be answered. -
Fedora moving to libera.chat