The Picard Maneuver@lemmy.world to Programmer Humor@programming.dev · 7 months agoThe IT experience?lemmy.worldimagemessage-square49fedilinkarrow-up11arrow-down10
arrow-up11arrow-down1imageThe IT experience?lemmy.worldThe Picard Maneuver@lemmy.world to Programmer Humor@programming.dev · 7 months agomessage-square49fedilink
minus-squareLinkerbaan@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkarrow-up0·7 months agoCAMM RAM is nowhere near mainstream yet so that’s understandable. NVME should be known though. Don’t forget to praise them every day for your company not spontaneously combusting.
minus-squarelud@lemm.eelinkfedilinkarrow-up0·7 months agoYeah, its specification was finalised only 6 months ago.
minus-squareryannathans@aussie.zonelinkfedilinkarrow-up0·7 months agoI don’t even think there’s a laptop that uses it yet
minus-squareakakunai@lemmy.calinkfedilinkarrow-up0·edit-27 months agoHell, even Dell who came up with the standard chose to switch to soldered memory on the brand new XPS laptops instead of using their own CAMM standard ^because ^money.
minus-squareryannathans@aussie.zonelinkfedilinkarrow-up0·7 months agoIf they just installed decent memory from factory you wouldn’t need swappable memory modules
minus-squareMiaou@jlai.lulinkfedilinkarrow-up0·7 months agoOh but it did burn down too! Turns out that installing Microsoft product on everything does not protect you from cyber attacks (rather the opposite). But now I’m protected from the very dangerous UDP packets the machines we sell send, much safer.
CAMM RAM is nowhere near mainstream yet so that’s understandable. NVME should be known though.
Don’t forget to praise them every day for your company not spontaneously combusting.
Yeah, its specification was finalised only 6 months ago.
I don’t even think there’s a laptop that uses it yet
Hell, even Dell who came up with the standard chose to switch to soldered memory on the brand new XPS laptops instead of using their own CAMM standard ^because ^money.
If they just installed decent memory from factory you wouldn’t need swappable memory modules
Oh but it did burn down too! Turns out that installing Microsoft product on everything does not protect you from cyber attacks (rather the opposite).
But now I’m protected from the very dangerous UDP packets the machines we sell send, much safer.