
Go into the search bar and type "technology". You will see many of them.

Has anyone tried making a reactor that can be turned off? Seems like an easy upgrade to make them silent in the short term.

The problem with USVs is they're relatively slow, if a ship is aware of their presence and is in a fighting state - it can get rid of a bunch of them. And it seems that navy helicopters are a decent counter, but overall it's too early to tell if USVs are that good or was it the element of surprise.

there is nothing that anybody can do about the most advanced missiles being made today apart from hoping that they miss
You can help them miss. If they're using GPS navigation, jamming works. It then reverts to inertial navigation though, so the longer you jam - the bigger the error.
Or you could try shooting it down, I doubt they can even dodge a head-on intercept without losing a load of energy.
edit: btw the problem you're describing is why cbg is a thing

My RX580 was so far ahead of it's time! /s

SC is soundcloud to me

They don't need "sane", they need willing and obedient

two or more people could easily share a game or software license just by sharing credentials
So like disks? Before everything started checking hwids. Just like the comment said, it would make corporations less money so they wouldn't do it.

more like very sad

Spotify's algorithms have become good at giving more of the same but worse for discovery.
To be fair, I use it for new drops and almost nothing else. New artists have to get to me through the word of mouth first, for people like me it's alright. I don't pay for it though so I can't complain that much.

More likely it's edited to shit


Mute the poster?

I'm a visual learner btw

I'm sure they'll be just fine if we "get" their games for free, they need to get used to not owning my money. Regardless, buying every new Ubisoft game is kinda pointless. I try one every 3-4 years, not much changes in a year.

Damn, you could buy two 8840U handhelds for that much money. Cool history piece tho

EntrySign is a vulnerability that enables attackers with ring 0 or kernel-level access to bypass safeguards.
Oh yeah, this is the same one that was in the news a while ago.
ComboAM5PI 1.2.0.3c AGESA
On my mobo it's been out since 2021/8/5 if I understand correctly, so it's been fixed for a few years now? So I guess anyone with a newer version is safe.
edit: Apparently AGESA V2 1.2.0.E is the one with the fix, what's with the numbering in the article lol
edit2: AMD's page on the fix, indeed fixed in ComboAM4v2PI 1.2.0.E, article is using a version for a different series. Look for your processor/series on that page for accurate bios version ig

lol I watched a bit of his Akademiks interview, he wore an all black kkk robe with a swastika chain underneath. He's gone.

Temporal AA doesn't look good compared to what?
Compared to some older AA tech. TAA is awful in motion in games. edit: by default. if there's a config file it can be made better edit2: sometimes no AA is clean as fuck, depends on the game and resolution
What do you mean "real resolution goes down"? Down from where?
I mean internal resolution. Playing at 1080p with DLSS means the game doesn't render at your specified resolution, but a fraction of it. Native (for now) is the best looking.
What is "image quality" in your view?
Mostly general clarity and stuff like particle effects, textures, stuff like that I think. You can ask those people directly, you know. I'm just the messenger, I barely play modern games.
I don't know ... a lot of the terms you're using are supposed to mean
Yeah, that's a problem. More people should be aware of the graphical effects in games. Thankfully some games now implement previews for damn near every quality toggle.
Over 160 Chinese nationals fight for Russia in Ukraine and "Beijing knows about this," Zelensky says

Someone correct me, but there isn't a real impact here, is there?
Not really, just more proof of mercenaries' existence. Ideally Ukraine wants China to lessen their support of invaders, doubt this is gonna help.

DLSS is one of those things where I'm not even sure what people are complaining about when they complain about it.
Mostly performance, from what I've seen. That hardware requirements go up, while the real (edit: internal) resolution goes down, meanwhile the image quality is stagnant. It's not completely the DLSS's fault though.
I think temporal antialiasing never looks good. I don't really care to talk about dlss though, I just shut up and avoid upscaling (unless it's forced grrrr).