If I manage an open source program like this, my job is to write the code and docs, publish it somewhere and maybe make some changes to make it more portable. That's it!
It's the distro's job to package and integrate this software with the rest of the system, to make it easier for their users.
I have 1677 packages installed. I absolutely _do not_ want to go to 1677 places to install or look for the latest version.
I think this could crash the stock market: Their TAM is now a small percentage of what it was, with all the second and third otder effects that follow from that
> The frontier labs have fantastic margin on inference.
Source?
The OpenAi filing will be very interesting indeed.
("trust me bro" statements from sama et al does not count, since I don't trust them)
Edit:
The best argument I have seen look at the price of inference from smaller companies running open models. And assuming they are profitable-ish. Their prices are lower than the OpenAi and Anthropics best models, so maybe they do make money on inference (ignoring all other costs)
Interesting, this went Tanstack -> Nx Console -> GitHub
I wonder how many other secrets and tokens have been stolen, just waiting to be abused to publish a malicious version of.. something.
IMO, the problem is [1] that actually rotation all secrets just because you might have installed a compromised packe is a huuge PITA. So it's tempting to take it lightly and hope for the best. And even if you really try, it's easy to miss one.
1: in addition to "running code from whereever" with little sandboxing
Let's see, System 76, previously Dell and Samsung.
All the pretty much the smallest and lightest I could find. So not fantastic, but good enough. For me, battery life is much lower on the list than "small and lightweight" and "works well with Linux".
I get your point, but GP is right: You said "Default install", not enabled by default.
The default install is actually very useful, and includes a lot, like parent said. Having run OpenBSD in the past, I found the their versions of things were often superior, at least for small setups (and some of them for large installs as well.. probably : )
I see a lot of learned helplessness around this stuff. People managed fleets of servers before the cloud you know, it's not impossible.
Cloud has pros and cons, both for small and large setups. I've spent ca 10 years working with GCP, and as the article says, there's a lot of complexity in these systems as well. And the network cost.. yikes
It's the distro's job to package and integrate this software with the rest of the system, to make it easier for their users.
I have 1677 packages installed. I absolutely _do not_ want to go to 1677 places to install or look for the latest version.