@jjunqueiraa This is great advice, and timely. Been wanting to install Claude code, but felt it wasn't a good idea to do on my main machine. Going to try out these sandboxes you listed.
First-sale doctrine is one of the oldest property rights in the common law. You buy a book, it is yours. Lend it, resell it, will it to your kids, burn it in the yard, keep it for fifty years. The seller loses all say the moment money changes hands.
Federal law flipped that on its head for anything digital. Every ebook you buy ships wrapped in a lock, and DMCA Section 1201 makes breaking that lock a crime, even on books you paid for.
The state did not simply fail to protect your property. The state wrote the statute that criminalizes defending it.
Let people own what they buy.
@stacey_hauff We did it in the 90s, but they gave us set too boxes with remotes to select who's watching. Every 30 minutes it would block the screen until we reentered the watchers. They actually modified the VCR with an RF pickup to track what we were watching!
The moment of one of today’s Russian strikes on Kyiv.
I can see that fewer and fewer people are reading news from Ukraine. I understand that on a Sunday morning, people don’t want to read about war. They want to sleep a little longer, drink good coffee, and sit in the sun. I understand that. The algorithms on X limit content about war, destruction, and suffering. You have to make an effort to even see this information.
All of this is understandable on a human level. But unfortunately, if you remove Putin and the war from your information feed, they do not disappear from reality.
Putin is a sadist and a maniac. He is a threat to all of humanity.
There needs to be active resistance. News from Ukraine needs to be shared. People need to keep their focus.
Despite a sleepless night, I’m still here. And I’m grateful to everyone who continues to stand with us.
One day, we’ll drink morning coffee together in a beautiful, peaceful Kyiv.
@mov_axbx What's your host system? Does it fail on other models as well?
I'm dealing with a slightly similar issue with another uncommon PCIe card, but we traced it to how the system interacted with the card's i2c sensors on the SMbus.