Twice in the last couple of months my bus has “crashed” during my commute.
The fix both times: rebooting it. While it was immobile in the middle of the street blocking traffic, of course.
Both the joy and the pain of EVs, potentially.
Twice in the last couple of months my bus has “crashed” during my commute.
The fix both times: rebooting it. While it was immobile in the middle of the street blocking traffic, of course.
Both the joy and the pain of EVs, potentially.


If they’re not going to concern themselves with legality when installing them, I don’t see why we should have to concern ourselves with uninstalling them.
It’s the only just and morally correct thing to do.
Back in those (pre-UEFI) days it was quite easy to add GRUB to the Windows boot manager instead.
You’d wind up with a menu entry that Windows would usually leave alone, unlike its aggressive reinstallation overwriting GRUB.
Once UEFI came along, it became easier to give each OS an entire disk with no connections between them, and use the BIOS as the boot menu.
Or, y’know, just give Windows the flick and only run Linux 😉