

If Minix counts, I got it running on a 286 some years ago. I don’t remember how much RAM it had, but it was very little.
If Minix counts, I got it running on a 286 some years ago. I don’t remember how much RAM it had, but it was very little.
I don’t know why people ask for help and refuse to listen when it’s given.
https://docs.docker.com/engine/install/rhel/
You should be able to add the repo and install the packages anyway. If it doesn’t work, give a description of the behavior including errors or logs.
Yes, I’m sure there are multiple professional software solutions that are expensive but can do it. Reconfiguring the equipment is much cheaper.
Even basic stuff like teleconferencing software can do it, like do y that when Zoom is playing audio it doesn’t pick it back up through a desk mic, unless the feedback is really bad.
Right there in your quote it says the AI would only interact with nonemergency calls. You said the system would reroute nonemergency calls.
So when a call comes in to 911, who picks up? A person or an AI?
It sounds like your issue is that each microphone is picking up the other person’s voice. If your software is insufficient to handle this, I’d move or change the microphones.
Both, and no, your quote comment and the article conflict.
the AI system would interact only with nonemergency callers and that emergency calls to 911 would be routed only to human dispatchers
Who makes this determination?
If you really access them that infrequently, are they actually worth keeping?
Only time will tell. But you may get better info from their own forum: https://discuss.grapheneos.org/d/23080-aosp-and-pixel-device-support
Not necessarily. The longer the better. Most people use a 4-digit passcode or simple pattern. A long passcode, generated by a CSPRNG is probably the best. I don’t know how biometrics stack up.
Same thing. Your lockscreen password/pattern/whatever is also the user partition decryption key. This is why BFU/AFU is a thing. After a reboot, the first unlock decrypts the partition. The key is stored in RAM. The only way to reset this is to reboot.
$50k of compute power, which may seem like a lot
To an individual. For a business, that’s a quarterly spend. For the government, it doesn’t even come up in budget reviews.
Right. Like you might walk by someone with a cold, and inhale a small number of their virus particles. But your immune system can handle that. If you spend a lot of time with them face-to-face, the virus gets a foothold (because of inhaling more viruses, this part isn’t a perfect metaphor) and starts multiplying, it can overwhelm the first line of defense and become an infection.
Not really, no. It’s only really cancer once the cells multiply uncontrollably. Yes, sometimes cells don’t properly perform apoptosis, but there are other mechanisms that will target and kill those precancerous cells. Only once those other mechanisms fail does it become true cancer.
Besides, even if this test did come back positive, they’d still have to identify a tumor and monitor. If you have a teeny-tiny benign tumor that isn’t hurting anything, the best course of action is to just leave it alone and monitor. Any surgical procedure risks spillage, which is basically human-induced metastasis.
It means they can rip the encrypted data off the phone, then take it over to a system with a bunch of GPUs and brute-force the password.
Me when coming back to a system without NetworkManager
You want ansible
It’s called a tracheostomy
Yes that’s how one satellite can image a lot of area.