From f602bb95e0b1160274bed0f125b8cfdedff3af96 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: mjfernez
Note though to people getting a card from the RTX 30 line (or higher) +-- these cards run pretty big, so make sure you have enough space in +your case. I barely made it myself!
A second note to RTX users: most if not all these cards come with an extra power supply input (two 8-pin connectors). If your power supply is -short on outputs, you can get a splitter cable like the one you see in -the picture to match the inputs. I personally am running a 600 W supply -for everything right now, which seems to be running fine. You should -check some other power guides though if you're concerned your power -supply won't drive the card
+short on outputs, you can get a splitter cable like this +one to match the inputs. I personally am running a 600 W supply for +everything right now, which seems to be running fine. You should check +some other power guides though if you're concerned your power supply +won't drive the cardAt first I tried to just naively update and see what happened, but I diff --git a/tutorials/www/how-to-use-the-internet.html b/tutorials/www/how-to-use-the-internet.html deleted file mode 100644 index 67a020e..0000000 --- a/tutorials/www/how-to-use-the-internet.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,250 +0,0 @@ - - -
- - - -Why would anyone want to use the Internet, really?
-There is actually purpose to connecting all the computers in the -world with near-instant speed beyond just streaming television, phishing -scams, pornography, punditry, and Fortnight competitions.
-Unfortunately, almost none of us use the Internet for it's intended -purpose: finding infomation.
-Writing an angry tweet to a celebrity or posting a picture of your -cat seems to be second nature for most people, but converting a picture -from a PDF or looking up a study (or even a word!) you saw in an article -is something else entirely.
-While that's in part the fault of our laziness, it's equally the -fault of what the Internet has become.
-For one: there's just so much more stuff now; it's hard to -know exactly where to start and who to trust. And so much of that stuff -is now garbage, either in the way it's presented, with -disruptive ads that don't close correctly, or in the way it's written: -vague, misleading, or straight incorrect.
-For two: no one really teaches you how to use this thing do they? -There are no courses on "How to use a search engine" or "How to find -good posts on a forum," and definitely not on "How to write -good posts on a forum." But these are exactly the kinds of skills you -really need if you want to navigate the modern world without getting -constantly distracted, misled, or totally lost.
-There are of course, countless guides on "netiquette" geared towards -every possible internet subculture you can find. While many of them have -influenced this document and give many helpful tips on writing good -informative posts, none of them really go over what I think is most -important: what to do with the information you're reading.
-This will probably be an evolving document as new services and -websites become available (or go down), but much of this material in the -beginning should be pretty generally applicable no matter what services -are available.
-As for which search engine to use: you should use all of them, until -you get the results you need.
-In my experience, none of the major search engines are particularly -good and I get inconsistent searches on all of them depending on what -I'm searching. There is a lot of preaching these days about privacy -concerns, but I don't really believe any service is more "private" than -another. These are all privacy nightmares, arguably by design. Your best -bet is just to search often and as many platforms as you can.
-A common complaint lodged at me whenever I recommend Wikipedia is -that it's not a source of truth since they found X mistake somewhere, or -made Y edit when they were a teenager that's still there. No one has -ever (or should ever) claim Wikipedia is a source of truth on it's own. -But you can use it to find more sources and maybe get a little -closer.
-Many in the advertising world will boast about using a VPN for -anonymity, or using a VPN in conjuction with Tor to "increase privacy." -This is simply a misunderstanding of terms. A VPN provides -privacy of the user's connection since it provides -encryption--only the VPN provider can "see" what is searched. The goal -of Tor is anonymity not privacy. Anonymity means "no one knows -who you are" not "no one knows what you're doing." Technically, traffic -is encrypted between nodes of the Tor service, so some level of privacy -is provided as well, but this is most effective when using hidden -services, not using Tor in general.
- - - -- cgit v1.2.3