>we strongly recommend planning your migration
Not even a brief period of advance notice to do a migration? Just one day no more security patches...
wth is going on over at intel
https://www.pcgamer.com/hardware/processors/intel-job-losses...
Being fired for poor performance is all about ample warnings, issuing a PIP, etc. The company wants the employee back on track. Being laid off is a situation that an employee cannot fix with their efforts. There's no incentive to work this week if it is already known that you are going to be laid off next week, but some employees might consider a prank or even minor sabotage as a helpless act of protest. It's safest to dismiss the laid-off ASAP.
Early in my career in the mid 2000s, the startup that was on the same floor as mine laid off a QA person, who then showed up the next day and fatally shot the CEO and head of HR. Our CEO called me and told me not to come in that day.
A separation agreement usually stipulates paying 2-3 months worth of salary, and extending the benefits similarly. I don't see how it is worse than spending a couple of extra weeks in the office, and receiving the same.
(Also note that employees that are harder to lay off also get hired with much more reluctance.)
Collective bargaining could achieve far more than 2-3 months of pay. I've personally seen cases of over double that much pay, reduced numbers of redundancies, sacking a few directors instead of a few workers and in one case even preventing the redundancies entirely by forcing management to reduce other costs.
Of course, you are likely to fare much better if the workplace is already unionised, so join/build a union now!
Thousands of layoffs. It's surprising someone even had time to post the notice.
There's something clear had that made it feel modern, familiar and boring (which might not be for everyone) 90% of my tasks were in vscode devcontainers so kept things simple and out of the system for the most part.
One of my fondest memories was making my own steamOS with Clear Linux: https://community.clearlinux.org/t/notes-on-building-a-clear...
And now I work on bazzite.gg, thanks for making a kickass OS Arjan and Co!
We are bankrupt of direction or ideas. Was are going to make panic knee jerk decisons in a public view.
I guess to the ultra rich owner class it looks like work. Business idiots all around the MBA tree.
I have no stake in clearlinux future or past, just observing.
With your leave I am borrowing this. Succinct yet so very descriptive.-
Mageia is my favorite of the Mandrake descendants.
Sad to hear about the team & shutdown.
What’s the next best alternative for server use (CachyOS)?
My previous project depends on it
Intel's retreat is unlike anything it's done before in Oregon
I wonder how much this will affect Kata Containers, which is AFAIK like the best/only good way to run containers in k8s with the security of VMs? https://katacontainers.io/
Man. There's so much amazing work Intel has done for the ecosystem. It's so hard so scary to imagine this world where no one else fills in so so much, so unclear who else does. Intel has done so so much for the ecosystem. It feels like open source has been an Immortal phalanx, always people to fill in: I hope so much I'm wrong but this shift in Intel feels like the death of the Immortal. What a pity that CHIPS act turned to dust, left such an amazing crucial industry hang out to dry.
If you've ever wondered how to lose all trust from your user base, it's the words effective immediately.
People need time to move and this basically gives users until the first vulnerability. Thanks Intel.
hardwaresofton•6mo ago
iwontberude•6mo ago
toshinoriyagi•6mo ago
I think it was quite successful, and I doubt they are shuttering it because they don't see the value in it, but because of overall lackluster company performance and the new CEO cutting costs/the workforce aggressively.
nine_k•6mo ago
bjconlan•6mo ago
Sunspark•6mo ago
yjftsjthsd-h•6mo ago
yakz•6mo ago
StableAlkyne•6mo ago
This happened recently with Scitkit-Learn Intelex, which was a drop-in replacement for some parts of sklearn that was a bit faster. One day, the Intel channel on Conda just stopped working (and I learned that Anaconda loses the will to live when a random channel you installed one package from is unavailable) and another organization took over Sklearn Intelex.
No communication could be found on Google connecting them to Intel (whose only news around the package was announcing the initial release a few years ago), you had to read the Git issue history to find people talking about the transfer.
I still have no idea what even happened to their Conda channel after the sudden disappearance. The complete lack of communication just left a bad taste in my mouth...
esseph•6mo ago
Also completely outsourced all marketing.
squarefoot•6mo ago
mikepurvis•6mo ago
But I have no idea who’s actually paying the bills, behind the scenes.
gchamonlive•6mo ago
imiric•6mo ago
There is a lot of software that fits and optimizes for the former. Just be smart and selective about your choices, and avoid compromising.
hardwaresofton•6mo ago
It requires a certain taste. There's a skill involved.
> Just be smart and selective about your choices, and avoid compromising.
This is a very "draw the rest of the owl" kind of statement
imiric•6mo ago
kev009•6mo ago
mikepurvis•6mo ago
A lot of normal users don’t feel these pain points or tolerate them by sidestepping the whole affair with containers or VM images. But if you’re in a position where these things have an impact it can be extremely motivating to seek out others who are willing to experiment with different ways of doing things.
zymhan•6mo ago
hardwaresofton•6mo ago
mikepurvis•6mo ago
For a less controversial take, consider alpine's apk package manager. For a single-use container that runs one utility in an early dockerfile stage, apk can probably produce that image in 2-3 seconds, whereas for an apt-based container it's more like 30 seconds. That may not matter in the grand scheme of things or with layer caching or whatever, but sometimes it really does.
lispisok•6mo ago
"a theorized phenomenon by which the future life expectancy of some non-perishable things, like a technology or an idea, is proportional to their current age."
hardwaresofton•6mo ago
binary132•6mo ago
rdl•6mo ago
avazhi•6mo ago
Company is absolutely cooked.
Sunspark•6mo ago
mbreese•6mo ago
mepian•6mo ago
Fade_Dance•6mo ago
RantyDave•6mo ago
dehrmann•6mo ago
If you spit up chip design and fab, who would be interested in each? And is there enough x86 demand to keep the design side open? Windows on ARM is a thing, and data centers have been buying more from AMD than they used to.
WD-42•6mo ago
esseph•6mo ago
Cooked
justinclift•6mo ago
happycube•6mo ago
justinclift•6mo ago
Is there a list, like there is for Google?
BLKNSLVR•6mo ago
hardwaresofton•6mo ago
There’s a tension there, but this is why it’s a skill — theres no simple rule. Fully open source community governed projects can be some of the most obviously good to ignore.
binary132•6mo ago
TrevorFSmith•6mo ago
hardwaresofton•6mo ago
binary132•6mo ago