Last I checked some months ago they haven't entered the EU market and don't have near term plans to :(
They also don't recommend importing as that kind of defeats the purpose seeing as you'll be unable to easily source parts or even get support, maintenance or warranty
What would you patent?
"A program which handles low level functionality and manages other programs?"
I suppose what I mean is that there is "prior art". You can't patent something if it isn't new and the concept of Linux isn't. Linux isn't the first kernel. This law wouldn't change that.
The first person to create a kernel though, under this law that might perhaps (?) have been patentable. Which would've crippled the entire software industry in it's infancy. Yay patents!
I have 0 faith that a router which doesn't have high speed ethernet will ever be able to deliver such fast WiFi. If they've cheaped out on the ethernet I doubt they've splurged on WiFi most devices can't use. And if you're talking about fast ethernet, then WiFi is chanceless.
To be fair, would it matter if someone got access to your account key? There isn't really any data on your account is there (isn't that the point)? It'd just let you connect to the VPN
Jank is one reason I'm not a fan of electron. It's very common to gain extra scrollbars, for the contents to shift around weirdly. Things break in ways that native apps never do, due to the sheer complexity of web rendering these days. Customizability is nearly always lacking, especially when it comes to cooperating with the host OS's preferences...
It's legitimately hilarious to me when the creator of the OS ships web-based UI on their own operating system... Like teams on windows. Not only is it a terrible experience, slow, buggy and sluggish - it's obviously not native - on Microsoft's own OS! Where they've made all the UI APIs!
Wrong. Sounds like you think only fixed point/precision could be implemented in decimal. There's nothing about floating point that would make it impossible to implement in decimal. In fact, it's a common form of floating point. See C# "decimal" type docs.
To everyone commenting that you have to convert to binary to represent numbers because computers can't deal with decimal number representations, this isn't true! Floating point arithmetic could totally have been implemented with decimal numbers instead of binary. Computers have no problem with decimal numbers - integers exist. Binary based floating point numbers are perhaps a bit simpler, but they're not a necessity. It just happens to be that floating point standards use binary.
Fair enough! Not terribly surprised about the size then, though - there's a lot of stuff VS can do. When limited to just a few workloads you need the size isn't unreasonable in my opinion though.
Thinking that C# is just Unity is a MASSIVE disservice to C# and dotnet imo. Unity's usage of C# is really crummy, basically relegating a very powerful language to working as a weird scripting language.
Last I checked some months ago they haven't entered the EU market and don't have near term plans to :(
They also don't recommend importing as that kind of defeats the purpose seeing as you'll be unable to easily source parts or even get support, maintenance or warranty