A new ChromeOS Flex USB program from Google and Back Market aims to revive aging laptops by letting users easily install Google’s lightweight operating system.
If you're looking for a distribution for an aging machine and you want to go with something other than a Ubuntu-based distribution, walk through the Arch with Omega.
Google is partnering with Back Market to sell USB sticks that let you install ChromeOS Flex on older Windows and Intel-powered Macs collecting dust.
If you’ve used Linux for a long time, you know that we are spoiled these days. Getting a new piece of hardware back in the day was often a horrible affair, requiring custom kernels and lots ...
Getting started with Raspberry Pi can be a bit daunting for a newcomer, but these tips will have you on your way to programming fun projects in no time.
BunsenLabs Carbon is a Debian-based distro and CrunchBang successor. The latest version, dubbed Carbon, is lightweight and ...
Learn how to extend your Linux laptop's battery lifespan by setting charge thresholds with TLP. Step-by-step config for major Laptop brands.
IBM stock analysis: why its mainframes and enterprise software are insulated from AI disruption, with strong FCF and growth ...
Topping it all off is the fact that Z1 is used in the Lenovo Legion Go S, but if you get the version that sports SteamOS, then you won't have to rely on AMD for driver updates, because Valve handles ...
Abstract: This paper presents an arithmetic paradigm for computing in memory (CIM) using unipolar switching spin-orbit-torque magnetic random access memory (SOT-MRAM) devices. The proposed MRAM array ...
Abstract: Traditional malware detection techniques often struggle against the sophisticated obfuscation methods employed by modern malware. To address this challenge, this paper proposes HyperMD, a ...
I’m a traditional software engineer. Join me for the first in a series of articles chronicling my hands-on journey into AI ...