Oh they finally got that up and running? That's good, but extremely late. It released in 2021. That's half a decade. As long as running an upstream kernel means you have to use 5+ year old SoCs, running upstream Linux instead of a vendor kernel remains completely out of the question for most circumstances.
I used to run some weird 5.x kernel until I found about collabora and then I still had to cook my own fdt files and patch some weird stuff in kernel, keeping my own local branch, but yeah, it's always the same story with upstreaming, sadly. Been there, done that since OpenEZX days.
But now, I just did the system update, rebooted and got 7.0.0-1 from the package manager, which is never than my x86 laptop. I still have trust issues with this, expecting it to not boot or get up without HDMI output zo.
> they don't fully understand, the patch looks fine
I don't get this part. Why is the reviewer signing off on it? AI code should be fully documented (probably more so than a human could) and require new tests. Code review gates should not change
If an insider, say a member of the Department of Defense (or War, duh) bets a certain date: they could internally influence the decision to execute on that date rather than possibly a better (earlier?) date that could yield less damage or loss to either side.
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