It remains to be seen if agentic development really provide an advantage, especially when you see the extraordinary fall in reliability of products and infra managed by early adopters. Development time is hardly the bottleneck in my company for example.
Also I assume the cost of development skyrocketed so much over the months that our company started implementing drastic cost reductiom measures everywhere that seem to mitigate any improvement we've had.
For the record there are at least 2 distros that carry the Mandriva/Mandrake legacy. Besides OpenMandriva there is also Mageia which I believe is the more popular option.
I am a BSD user yet I think this is largely irrelevant in the scope of a NAS which is the conversation we have here. Even in the cases bleeding edge hardware support is relevant, the latest Linux LTS kernel has probably wider hardware support than the freebsd-current at any given point in time anyway.
FreeBSD is a great choice, but there is no need to invent silly reasons to justify using it.
> - The make around 5 billion in revenue per quarter - The problem according to them is profit margin - around 150-160 million
How are they still doing 5 billions in revenue per quarter? Are Xbox and games still sold? In my area they seem to have disappeared from the physical stores alley. I realized that a few weeks ago there were Playstation and Nintendo products in the video game area but no Xbox anything.
They don't need to because it is just a PoC and I don't think it hs been said anywhere that soloar panel between rain tracks would be the unique source of energy.
There are also a lot of vertical sound proofing barriers that could be equipped with panels.
> Did we really fill up all the area on top of roofs, parkings lots, industrial areas, etc., and we're running out, and we have to put solar cells on railroads?
I guess it is easier to control the deployment since they own the railroads.
Also I assume the cost of development skyrocketed so much over the months that our company started implementing drastic cost reductiom measures everywhere that seem to mitigate any improvement we've had.