You must be anti-pro-life.
This is totalitarian.
You must be anti-pro-life.
This is totalitarian.
Tell them what you really think, Stacy.
Masten was an alumni factory, resulting in a lot of other innovative companies. They were arguably the progenitor to SpaceX’s success at reusability. I hope they’ll be able to restructure.
They can’t let it happen.
Fedora 35 has started randomly crashing. Sometimes it happens when I highlight and ctrl-C a URL in Brave, but sometime it just does it on its own, as in I go away and when I try to wake it up, it’s just black screens. Any ideas? I’ve reported it to Brave.
[Wednesday update]
Now it’s randomly doing it when I try to move the cursor in Libre Office Writer. It doesn’t seem to be a resource issue; none of the cores are very busy, and it’s only using about half my memory.
[Bumped]
[Update a while later]
The triggering event primarily seems to be a copy to clipboard. I managed to do it twice in a row with the same action, copying a specific email address from Thunderbird. I’ve logged into it via ssh from my laptop, so when it happens again, I’ll be able to see if the machine is still running. If so, it’s clearly a GUI issue, maybe a problem with Wayland. While I’m connected, I’m going to back up data to the laptop so I can work from there until I resolve the issue.
[Late-afternoon update]
Well, it’s apparently more than a GUI problem (which doesn’t mean that it isn’t caused by Wayland). When it died, my ssh session died as well, and I couldn’t reconnect. I guess the next step is try logging in with Xorg, and see if it persists.
[Update late Thursday night]
Well, clearly it was Wayland. I switched the default to Xorg this morning, and it’s gone all day without issues.
[Bumped]
…and why it matters.
RIP.
To the degree that one agrees with the Gaia hypothesis, space settlers would be helping it reproduce.
…for lunar resource utilization. I hadn’t heard of the Breaking Ground Trust, but we’ll see where this goes.
They used Covid as an excuse to get rid of menus, but I think it was just an excuse to save money on printing them, and make it easier to change prices.