@theo Not for serious work, but Grok is the best model when it comes to illegal activities.
But yeah both Grok and Gemini are trash when it comes to dev. 5.5 is still my daily driver.
@vodean55@AudeJavel79 Non, c’est un rapport entre une estimation spéculative de la valeur d’un actif et une production de richesse annuelle.
C’est comme comparer la capacité d’une piscine vide à la conso totale d’eau par année.
@vodean55@AudeJavel79 Tu peux pas prendre un calcul qui n’a aucun putain de sens et le comparer à 3 instances différentes. Le résultat a toujours aucun sens.
Moi aussi je peux te comparer le taux de meurtre au nombre de patates acheté par habitant, c’est pas en le faisant 3 fois que c’est logique.
@Jolatsarine@NicolasQuiPaie@BFMTV Ordres de grandeurs complètement différents. "L’immigration et les feignasses" nous coûtent un prix complètement ridicule comparé aux retraites.
@M0_R4_H4@TailosiveTech You completely missed the point. Manufacturers continue making Type A peripherals because some other manufacturers still support it on laptops. Even though it is objectively worse. It’s time for it to die.
@Reda_640@DolskyRaphael@Romain_Herreros Ta réponse est complètement inutile. La question c’est "c’est quoi cette loi encore ?" Sous entendu "pourquoi elle existe" et toi tu réponds "elle existe parce qu’elle a été votée".
La réponse de @tQp7DN2XVnMvJ8i est bien plus adéquate.
@TheTacticalBrit You guys haven’t learned a single fucking thing from the CrowdStrike incident. Your PC could get completely bricked tomorrow by a Vanguard update that caused a division by 0 on startup.
A software having more rights than you on your system is fucking crazy.
Video games belong in the red rectangle called "applications"
If something wants access to the blue rectangle called "kernel",
they're almost certainly evil.
Fundamentally, a kernel level software, or any software for that matter, should be useful to the user.
At least CrowdStrike Falcon protects you.
Vanguard only protects Riot.
People are mostly okay with a software having more rights on their system than themselves… Quick reminder that no software is perfect, and that your pc could get bricked tomorrow because Vanguard received an update that caused a division by 0 on startup.
Well, that escalated quickly.
There’s been a wave of claims by cheaters about Vanguard “bricking” their PCs, so let’s clear that up: Vanguard does not damage hardware or disable your devices.
The photo we posted is a picture of cheat hardware devices that are sold explicitly for cheating in VALORANT (not normal PCs or PC components). Through our latest updates, Vanguard now makes those devices worthless for VAL, but does not in any way brick PCs or PC components or PC software.
Our latest update enforces standard platform security features, like the Input-Output Memory Management Unit (IOMMU), on accounts identified as using Direct Memory Access (DMA) cheating devices. These protections are already part of modern systems and when enabled, they block DMA cheat devices (such as those shown in the photo) from accessing memory in downstream applications, like our games.
If a cheat setup continues attempting to cheat after those protections are enabled, the system may generate hardware faults or instability. This is expected behavior under IOMMU when attempts are made to read protected memory.
Disabling IOMMU allows the cheat device to function again, but IOMMU will still be required to play our games. This means the cheat device won’t work with our games, but your PC isn’t “bricked.” We would not, and cannot, impact your PC’s functionality in any other fashion.
This functionality only applies to systems attempting to use DMA cheat devices, and players who are not using DMA-based cheat setups are not affected.
We’ll keep investing in anti-cheat to protect competitive integrity, and we’ll keep being as transparent as possible about how those systems work.
We are putting way too much trust in software. Running anything that has a release cycle faster than 2 months in the kernel is suicidal. Everything that can run in userland should. Most things that need to run in the kernel should not exist.