Don't tend to have a terminal emulator of any kind installed on remote boxes. They're headless.
wewbull
That exception is my primary use case for tmux, so that explains it.
As a non-user of kitty, why did it make you drop tmux? Don't they do different jobs?
Yes, yes and yes, but it'll take a while. It's a six year project overall.
...but why do the shelves look like they incinerated the bottles in-place?
I doubt Trump will be alive when those fabs come online. It takes years. In the meantime he'll place tariffs on technology imports without having the alternative domestic production.
There's been been bills at the EU level, but they've been defeated. I think individual countries introduced their own bills if they were supporters of the EU one.
Basically browsers are big because they are operating systems for web hosted applications with huge attack surfaces and lots of legacy compatibility requirements amassed over 3 decades.
A rewrite isn't the answer. Putting limits on browser functionality is. JavaScript was the turning point IMHO.
Personally I keep a copy of chromium around just for Google meet. Everything else is on Firefox.
Mainly just a case of developing the design. If you know how to get performance out of a processor then the instruction set is largely secondary. However, a high performance processor is not a simple thing to design.
That's not to say the other factors you list aren't an issue. The latest manufacturing processes are only available from TSMC and all production slots are bought out by nVidia, AMD and Apple. Everybody else has to make do with older processes.
Adoption is probably the easiest one. Linux support for RISC-V is pretty good and recompiling software for it is pretty simple.
That's not a flaw. That's a right to repair requirement.