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At least in NA, if you only have the DRLs on, it means your rear lights aren't on.


Anecdata around SV: I've seen an uptick in urban night drivers with only their DRLs and no tail lights.


That's not true for my vehicle, I've checked.


Not sure why people are not believing you. I have a Volvo and the headlights and taillights are illuminated at all times, even when the headlight switch is "off."

The only thing that turning the headlights "on" does differently is enable high beams.


Thanks - I'm ok with that. As also mentioned, I'm NOT when it's a dark car at night with ONLY DRL and no rear lights at all - which I've seen a LOT of lately..


Because that's the law, like it or not. Apple doesn't have a problem because the rules were the rules from day 1. Google did a bait and switch, legally.


What does antitrust law have to do with "day 1"? So if Ford and GM are both already in all 50 states and then they try to divide up territory between them, that's illegal, but at the point when there were still areas one of them wasn't in, they could publicly announce a contractual agreement to not enter into the other's territory? That seems not just questionable but actively bad policy with an enormous perverse incentive.

And if you're going to say this:

> Because that's the law, like it or not.

I would ask you to point me to the text in the statute requiring the courts to do that.


>Which seems to have _zero_ mentions outside of academic papers.

Nicira or NVP?


It's all at the big cloud service providers. Not as much focused on the physical network (as originally imagined), but in the overlay networks. Seethe various DPUs like Intel IPU, Nvidia/Mellanox Bluefield, etc. Nvidia DOCA even uses OvS as the sort of example out of the box software to implement networking on Bluefield. When your controller is Arm cores 5 cm away on the same PCB doing per connection setup is no longer as absurd ;)


s/Seeth/See/, wow.


My only issue with Intel at this point is Lunar Lake only supports 32GB of RAM max. If it supported 64GB, I'd buy it today.


I believe that Arrow Lake supports 64gb. I'm waiting on availability before I replace my aging (9yo) Lenovo X1 Yoga.


>well, could you consider an underlying OS a dependecy?

I've worked on systems that ran entirely in memory, and continued running during kexec. You can't do syscalls. So yeah :)


That's certainly one philosophical point of view, but it's not universally true.

https://www.theargumentmag.com/p/the-problem-with-bossbabe-l...


Matt Bruenig is possibly the least qualified person on the planet to write about economic policy.


France doesn't control the Euro/ECB, so the situation is structurally different.


There's a theory that changing regulation Q to uncap interest rates on savings accounts had more to do with ending stagflation than the fed funds rate hikes.

I'm not smart enough to fully evaluate if that's true, but it was an interesting theory to me at least.

https://cepr.org/voxeu/columns/what-really-drives-inflation


Aren't chips + memory constrained by process + reticle size? And therefore, how much HBM you can stuff around the compute chip? I'd expect everyone to more or less support the same model size at the same time because of this, without a very fundamentally different architecture.


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