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Any idea of what the server platform is? Linux?


It runs on Linux-based infrastructure. We've updated the blog post to clarify this. Thanks!


Which Linux?


It's well-known Apple is a big RHEL customer, including Linux on Azure, lending credence to the saying that every Mac is built upon Windows (Hyper-V).

Fairly certain the iTunes store, their web store, etc. are all built upon enterprise Linux as well.

And there's nothing wrong with that. Use the best tool for the job. Most car owners have never looked in the engine compartment.


I don’t think many azure services are Linux on hyper-v, are they? Azure (afaik) is quite heavy on bare metal Linux.


The OS powering Azure is Windows, even if about 60% of the VMs run Linux workloads, as per official numbers.

https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/blog/windowsosplatform/a...


Many of their SaaS offerings are, but many infrastructure offerings are running Windows Server underneath. Rent out any Azure VM, and regardless of guest OS, it's using Hyper-v underneath as the hypervisor.


Ah cool, I didn't realize that even their linux VMs are being powered by Hyper-V


> including Linux on Azure

Are you sure about this?


In this case probably Linux, but Apple also uses custom M-series based servers running a hardened Darwin-based OS for LLM processing of user data.


I really really want some kind of write up on that custom m-series hardware. Not very much has even leaked out.


I’m not even sure those have been turned on tbh


Almost certainly


Can't really imagine what else it would be.


Apple is known to use Linux on servers, but I could see a case for BSD being in the running.

The macOS userland is based on BSD so you’d get a nice little fit there. And it’s not like some common BSD is bad at doing the job of a server. I know it can do great things.

Who knows if it was ever discussed. They wouldn’t want Windows (licensing, optics, etc) and macOS isn’t tuned to be a high performance server. Linux is incredibly performant and ubiquitous and a very very safe choice.


Another BSD that Apple used at one point was NetBSD, which is what they ran on their AirPort wireless routers prior to their discontinuation.


- What are the numbers for the years previously? - What are the numbers for travel to other countries/locations? - What's the breakdown between flights originating in Canada or US?

Hard to draw real conclusions without all data, but easy to make something clickable.


This feels as hopeless as trying to keep your email/contacts from social media sites. Even if you are vigilant about never allowing an app/service to download your contacts, your friends will share theirs and it is trivial to recreate your contact list. If I keep my DNA from these companies, my relatives will share theirs and they basically have my DNA.


> This feels as hopeless as trying to keep your email/contacts from social media sites.

The cynic in me agrees, but the process was quick and easy, and I know I'm not safer by not deleting my information from 23andMe. I recommend it.


Any pointers on the post-processing software? Anything to correct red-tinted slide scans?


Honestly, the best thing out there for color correction right now (to me) is Adobe's Camera Raw feature.

https://blog.adobe.com/en/publish/2024/10/14/the-adobe-adapt...

The AI denoise is fantastic, too:

https://gregbenzphotography.com/lightroom-acr/acr-17-ai-adob...


Can you give any details of the driver board or possibly a link? Thanks in advance.



Sorry about the late response, the listing that I bought is this one:

https://www.aliexpress.us/item/3256804264671858.html

I didn't bother to mess around with mounting, I just used command strips to attach the driver board to the back of the monitor and mounted the monitor on one of these clamp-type stands:

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01MFDQR5D

The heat sink on the board can get warm but nothing to worry about regarding being mounted to the monitor.


OnlyKranks?


Look up "rent-seeking".


It is too bad we cannot come up with a better name, so people do not confuse it with everything else we call rent.


Anytime someone is trying to keep their hand in my pocket with continuous payments for something used to be a one time payment rather than offer the same but as a service is rent seeking to me. Am I confused on the definition?


What would be an example of that? Most that I can think of involve a company (cough BMW cough) offering a feature they used to sell outright, for a monthly fee. The fee being much lower than the outright price of that feature. They're still offering something of value, in this case convenience and lower cost (if you don't want it all the time, buying it incrementally may well be cheaper than buying it outright; Tesla FSD comes to mind as a contemporary example).

I think the problem most people have with the BMW trick is that they include the feature physically, but disable it. That does almost smell like rent seeking, but I think it does not quite get there. Manufacturers routinely hold back a bit and don't deliver maximum capability. For reasons like emissions, or longevity, whatever. This isn't much different IMO, if you're not paying anything for it then the fact that they included it anyway is immaterial.

Probably the most common kind of rent everyone thinks of, property rental, is also not rent-seeking. There is value in what is being provided.

To go back to a car analogy, it would be like BMW engaging the brakes on your car and then charging you a fee release them so you could drive (even better, making it legally required to pay the fee in order to drive on public roads). They're not providing any value at all, and then demanding money for it.


The pejorative term, in the economic sense, tends to be reserved for rents obtained by gaming the system, rather than the usual kind that charges for use of property or capital.

Example: a utility company lobbies for a law requiring utilities to charge a junk fee.

Non-example: I charge someone to live in my spare bedroom.

Tesla is offering use of something they built (Superchargers, self-driving software, etc.) in exchange for a fee. They aren't gaming the system to force anyone to pay. You might not like the pricing model, but there's nothing economically wrong with it.


Yes, that's not rent-seeking. Rent-seeking is basically collecting money without offering any service or product in return. It does not benefit the economy, in contrary to profit-seeking, which is what Tesla is doing.


Any way you can name the person who helped with the unclaimed property issue?


This is wrong and if it's the same idea floating around Twitter based on page 17 of the 13D, it's definitely wrong. People are misinterpreting a reference to no longer being subject to seller's due diligence because financing has been secured, i.e. the buyer is qualified.


What shoes does your sister make? Are they similar to Doc Martens?


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