Now we just need a friendly neighbourhood nanoscale fab.
Disclaimer: I don’t represent KDE in any interaction with this account. I am just freeloading off of the kde.social server.
Now we just need a friendly neighbourhood nanoscale fab.
In short, if you’re pwned once, you are pwn3d f0r3v#rrrrreeeheehaahaahaa*cough**cough*
These are the kinds of exploits you use to create APT (Advanced Persistent Threats).
On the contrary, it (the website) looks really nice.
The product, on the other hand, seems targeted towards “normies” and would probably do better in a place that doesn’t have ppl already self hosting their stuff.
Also ~100Mb/s is in no way the average speed in an Indian household.
You’re right. It’s not.
I also don’t see any specific mentions of india in your link up there to that random site.
I don’t see any either. Guess why. Because it only has the top 10, further emphasising the point that :
the average Indian is not doing “Hella fast Tokyo banddrifts”
And Japan has a 300+ Tb/s connection. Your point?
My point is that the average Indian is not doing “Hella fast Tokyo banddrifts” (not sure what banddrift even means, but no).
And yes, a 1Gb/s connection is theoretically available, but how many people are using the ~₹4000/month connection?
Considering how many people tend to just not have Broadband at home, relying just on mobile internet, we can see how things compare with others.
Also, to point to the tread starter, most of the “thousands of” cables that you see on poles in congested areas, are just abandoned cables from older installations which nobody cared to remove.
those wizards must be streaming some Hella fast Tokyo banddrifts with all them wires.
That part is wrong for India, at least.
Here’s a random site with some stats
India, you can expect ~100Mb/s with FTTH and 50Mb/s otherwise. Reliability is even worse.
Rest is right.
Well, guess who’s not buying next gen Ryzen?
They are doing similar stuff with deliberately delaying Linux driver capabilities for Radeon 7xxx series, to make more GPUs die out faster, by overheating (zero RPM fan until 60°+).