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Broadcom terminates VMware's free ESXi hypervisor
  • Yes. A perpetual license just means no fixed end date, not that it's irrevocable or interminable.

    You can probably get away with continuing to use ESXi free licenses even commercially, you just won't have support. And at home, nothing is going to stop existing versions from working.

    Incidentally, assuming I found the right license agreement: https://www.vmware.com/content/dam/digitalmarketing/vmware/en/pdf/downloads/eula/universal_eula.pdf

    It doesn't actually say it's perpetual. It only says "The term of this EULA begins on Delivery of the Software and continues until this EULA is terminated in accordance with this Section 9", but that section only covers termination for cause or insolvency, there is no provision for termination at VMware's discretion. So, while I'm not a lawyer, it definitely sounds like you can continue using ESXi free.

    Actually, reading further, I think the applicable license is this one: https://www.vmware.com/vmware-general-terms.html

    But that one has even less language about license term and termination. Although it does define "perpetual license" as "a license to the Software with a perpetual term", again not irrevocable or interminable.

  • systemd 255 Released With A "Blue Screen of Death" For Linux Systems
  • Yes, and that's a good thing if you don't want it to start killing processes. You have that extra time/space to deal with the out-of-memory condition yourself.

    Or you can ignore that condition and continue using the system in a degraded state, with swap as "disk RAM".

  • Microsoft readies 'groundbreaking' AI-focused Windows release as new leadership takes the helm
  • No, but Windows is so entrenched that they don't need to actually be competitive in order to keep making profit. Instead, the Windows team has to invent things nobody ever wanted or needed that they can advertise to make it look like they're still useful. Software UX polish-passes don't make good marketing. You can't seriously put "you know that one weird thing that only happened to a fraction of users sporadically? we fixed it" on a marketing campaign.

  • Japanese Institute breaks optical fiber speed record with 22.9 petabits per second — 1,000 times faster than existing cables
  • ISP shittiness aside, ISPs do actually pay for Internet backbone access by the byte. Usually there are peering agreements saying "you take 1tb of traffic from us, and we'll take 1tb of traffic from you", whether that traffic is destined for one of their customers (someone on Comcast scrolling Instagram), or they're just providing the link to the next major node (Comcast being the link between AT&T's segment of the US backbone and Big Mike's Internet out in podunk Nebraska).

    And normally that works pretty well, until power users start moving huge amounts of data and unbalancing the traffic.

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  • Yeah it's not very helpful. That page says "see the sidebar", when the sidebar is what pointed you to that page in the first place...

    I think they're referring to the terms of service, which has a 5.0.1: https://legal.lemmy.world/tos/

  • "Singularities don't exist," claims black hole pioneer Roy Kerr
  • A singularity is the single point mass at the center of an ideal (Schwarzschild) black hole. But mathematically, that can only happen if the mass that forms the black hole isn't rotating. In reality, all the mass in the universe is moving around, because mass is not distributed uniformly, so gravity is pulling stuff around in a big mess. So when a black hole forms, it's definitely a rotating (Kerr) black hole.

    A rotating mass has different gravity than a non-rotating mass. Not by much, but when you've got the enormous mass of a black hole, it becomes significant. This causes objects "falling into" a black hole to "miss" the point at the center, and form more of a cloud during spaghettification.

    The article is fairly accessible if you sit down and read it.

    Honestly, inside the event horizon, everything stops making sense compared to our day-to-day experiences. The immense gravitational forces distort space and time. It doesn't really make sense to think about objects remaining intact as recognizable objects once they cross the event horizon.

  • InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)WM
    wmassingham @lemmy.world
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