is software maintained by non-profit organizations niggerlicious?
>>107648800Depends of the org and quantities of trannies and niggers on it.
Not always. State/gov software tends to be pretty bad. But some other kinds of nonprofits might get genuine crusader personalities that do it for the love of the game and the mission and enforce something decent.
>>107648800Profit is niggerlicious. Products of divine intellect belong to God who shines the light of his wisdom upon all who would open their eyes.
>>107648800In general, software made for big teams to work on is niggerlicious, whereas software made by a small group of dedicated people is divine intellect.Basically Conway's law
most dedicated community in FOSS?
>>107639976Emulating CPU bugs isn't the difficult part, they're well documented, it's more so making sure things are accurate to the physical components of the console. Software is deterministic and predictable but real life hardware can be more unstable. As an interesting example, Super Bonk on the SNES has a gameplay demo where there's a chance that the inputs of the demo will become desynced and that it'll mess up because of variance in the clock speed of the graphics chip and the CPU. However it never happens on emulator, because emulators don't bother to emulate the physical clock component. Therefore, a more stable result is less accurate than actual hardware... now you see, true accuracy is hard to achieve. Of course, you could argue that the more stable result is preferable to the behavior of the actual hardware, but then you have other games like the SNES Speedy Gonzalez game where a level cannot be cleared *unless* a specific hardware edge case is emulated.
>>107639976>>107639976Another emulator development tidbit that may interest you are illegal opcodes. This is mostly a 6502 specific thing AFAIK, but I think the 8086 may have some as well. You might know about their existence, but why they work is pretty interesting too. The 6502 (The CPU used in the NES) had a flawed instruction decoder. Instructions were decoded by looking up entries in a table of microcode depending on which bits of the opcode are on and off. Nothing wrong with that, but there's also nothing stopping you from using opcodes that mix properties of completely unrelated instructions. Some can be useful but most just jam the CPU. Even some official NES games used unofficial opcodes, for instance, Aladdin uses a SLO instruction which shifts the contents of a byte of memory left and then compares it against the accumulator register. Anyways, apparently some of these instructions are unstable and don't work the same way all of the time due to analog variance. A truly accurate NES emulator would have to emulate all the undocumented opcodes and then account for the hardware being used. Accuracy is a total nightmare.
>>107646927Also using these isn't generally reccomended since newer 6502 revisions used those slots for new, incompatible instructions
>>107646178sometimes autism can be a superpowerin the future we'll genetically engineer people to be autists so they can hyperfocus on things society needsbut for now we have to waste their power on retarded shit like emulating fucking shit videogames no one gives a shit about
>>107648687Oh gee I forgot what board I'm on... hang on, let me try againterry davis was really the most dedicated community in FOSS. he was a community of one, a hero who we can look torwards to for guidance to this very day. this is why we must use windows 7, because old good and new bad. also, trannies. also, indians. can i have some replies please? linux. cuck license. apple. ai. did you hear what happened on twitter? bruh. GNOME. discord. and it's thanks to zoomers that we can't have a comfy desktop. poorfags on suicide watch.
The team collected videos where creators show an on-screen gamepad overlay to train the AI. NitroGen learned to map gameplay pixels to gamepad actions. It currently only works with controller based games. nitrogen.minedojo.org
>using AI to do my dailies in mmos while I'm doing other shitI'm listening
>>107628160Runescape. Make a gold farm that is truly undetectable and become a millionaire.
>It was a joke 8 years agohttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=smM-Wdk2RLQ
>>107648730it's against the ToS like bottingif you can't stand doing things in a video game why even play it you mazed rat
>>107649032wow violating the terms of service is against the rules and I'm a rule followers so I would never do that! thanks for pointing that out fellow rule follower!
2026 will be the year of the Linux desktop (real)
>>107648477Linux is already miles ahead of windows on desktop. The only thing we need now is Linux gaining marketshare so first party drivers are also being developed for linux. This will improve support for laptops and phones and then finally winblows and jeetdroid will fall.
You'll only read/watch/play 1% of that stuff in your entire life.
>>107648608>If it's less than like 2 TB it's fine. People filling up their hard drive with stuff they like and erasing old stuff they don't like is fine.Yeah. I wouldn't call that hoarding.
>>107641451>because my shithole govt may disconnect my country from the rest of the world for whatever reason>because psychopath CEOs pull my favourite things off because other psychopath CEO did not update some bullshit paperwork>because I often rewatch things and redownloading gigabytes is wasteful and marks me as a weirdo in ((their)) logs>because the files I have will stay with me as long as I keep backups and buy new storage
>>107648652>Western Digital marketing post
>>107648843>I-I'm n-not a fed! Y-You're a s-s-shill!
>>107641451Stuff gets deleted all the time, and you can't predict what. I don't download indiscriminately, but after several times getting burned, I figured I might as well just save anything I think I'll want to revisit at some point.Storage is cheap, and I have a lot of unused space. Might as well put it to use just in case, if I really need the space back for some reason I can always prune it.
/dpt/ - Daily Programming ThreadWelcome to the Daily Programming Thread. What are you working on, /g/?Previous thread: >>107575071
>>107648745You people need to stop thinking that jobs are the only way to earn money. The reason why companies are doing massive layoffs and not hiring junior devs is the same reason why you can literally run your whole tech company practically solo. Instead of thinking, "Oh, I hope they pick me so I can waste my time making the CEO richer!" You should be thinking, "Oh, I hope they don't sue me because my products outclass their so much that they're butthurt.
>>107648571niiiiceand what do you use to control your led array?or maybe is it a screen?
>>107648975It's 12 LED panels. So resolution of 192x128 in total.They get controlled with a microchip SoC that has a quad core risc-v running linux and an FPGA.The fpga shifts out the pixels, the linux runs a web interface and writes the framebuffer.Linux (Epic Go app) also has a uart connection to the base esp32 that communicates with the remotes over esp-now
>>107649057pic related btw
>>107649057>quad core running linuxthat sounds awfully heavy for this applicationwhat guided this design choice?
Christmas Eve Eve EditionPrevious Thread:>>107555829https://desuarchive.org/g/thread/107555829/#107560148
>>107647512Nicu, senpai.>wine issues when upgrading to Fedora 43I heard that, but it didn't affect me, because I don't have wine installed as a system package, I use Bottles for that.
>>107647712Based Sabrina enjoyer.
>>107647830It's very similar to a Thinkpad keyboard. Maybe a little clickier but that's the only difference I've noticed. $80 is a bit steep for a keyboard, but I really hate mice, so to me it was worth it.
>>107641565rape
> Web developers are not real programmers.How do you respond?
>>107640263Web developers empowered his speech to reach the entire world. It's a much more impressive feat that his offline single player puzzle game that took him a decade to "program".
>a programmer is a person who writes computer programs>web systems are programs running on computersI mean, you could argue that they're 'bad' programmers, but they're actual programmers. Just grab a fucking dictionary.
no one cares what JBlow has to say about web programming. he is trying to give 'hot takes' about things that work fine and dont need fixing instead of releasing his programming language so real work can get donehe basically proving to everyone he is just a troll who spinning his wheels getting nothing done except a stupid game that after 10 years is not even close to being ready
release the compiler, jon
>>107647527>Web developers empowered his speech to reach the entire world.Mailing lists and Usenet predate the web by over a decade.
>UPGRADE & BUILD ADVICEPost build list or current specs: https://pcpartpicker.com/Provide specific use casesState BUDGET and COUNTRY or you will NOT be helped>CASEmATX: AP201, Lian Li A3, O11 Air Mini, XT M3, CH260ATX: XT PRO (ULTRA), AIR 903 Base/MAX, Lancool 207, Flux Pro, Meshify 3, 4000D FRAME, X50Dual Chamber: Y60/70, O11 Vision, Antec C8>CPUGaming: 14600K, 9/7600X, 7800X3D-Budget: 12400, 12600K, 7500FWorkstation: 265K, 285K, 9950X3DComment too long. Click here to view the full text.
>>107648819reported to the fbi, hopefully you get arrested
>>107648982>i've never had coil whine, what does it sound like?Mine sounds like this but lower pitched, just barely audible over the sound of my case fans. https://youtu.be/Z8xhhFfqDrc?si=krF2VLgTZ39ytK-P&t=482With headphones it's no issue, but without headphones I get this uncomfortable pressure build up in my ears, like they're getting tired. I must be exceptionally sensitive to it.
>>107649015>whats the best 9070xt variant?Every seller has a product lineup of low, medium, and high tier variants. Performance is nearly identical on all of them, so you can ignore the pricier high tier variants, but the low tier variants have worse cooling and cheaper parts. Go mid tier. I got a Hellhound and temps are never higher than 80 for memory or 87 for hotspot.
>>107648982https://youtu.be/HP73edpQwgc?si=bs_w6JRMxRSiwj9I&t=90
>>107649027most of the gains come from overclocking the memory and that can be a tricky one since it can be stable in 3dmark but unstable in various shit from ai to games, you dont get messed up graphics you just get worse performance.
Any version of Windows since 1995 has been more polished, production-ready and user-friendly than any Linux distro ever made. That's obvious to anybody who has installed both of them on the same machine.Are Linux users just lying about their distros being a better experience than a Windows installation?
>Why do Linux users pretend that Linux is a better experience than Windows? Because these days it is provided you aren't tech illiterate. Windows was constantly berating me for not subscribing to and using Microsoft products. Microsoft has a complete rapist mentality by not taking no for an answer.Being familiar with Windows and unfamiliar with Linux doesn't make Windows "better".
>Why do Linux users pretend that Linux is a better experience than Windows?Because it is. And that's not a good thing.>t. used every major windows version until 11 came out
>>107640854even if the image is hash-banned, you can easily just change the hash and filename. Its very convenient to do if you are using the gay. Also, it was spammed so hard that jay literally begged the dox spammer to stop, yet he still keeps making this flamewar troll threads like an absolute faggot he is.
>>107621970It's a better experience if you like your butthole unviolated
>>107649036then why do I hate to suck tranny CoC(k) and be connected to the internet every time I install something?
Linux is often sold as progress, but philosophically it feels like a step backward. The people who shaped the field at its best, Engelbart, Alan Kay, Licklider, were trying to make computers amplify human thought, not turn users into part time system administrators. Engelbart wanted integrated systems that helped people reason, collaborate, and build knowledge. Kay imagined the computer as a living medium, something you could understand, reshape, and learn from. Linux goes in the opposite direction. It inherits the Unix mindset where the system is a miserable little pile of loosely connected tools and the human is expected to glue them together through arcane commands and configuration files. Complexity is not reduced, it is pushed onto the user and normalized as a virtue. Instead of higher level concepts, Linux clings to decades old abstractions like everything being a file, text streams as universal interfaces, and shells as the main way to think. The result is a system no single person can fully understand, held together by conventions, folklore, and cargo cult practices. What makes this worse is the culture that formed around it. A common trait among Linux enthusiasts is a mix of resentment and shallow elitism, where struggling with the system is reframed as proof of intelligence or moral superiority. Difficulty becomes a badge of honor rather than a design failure. Many users overestimate their understanding, mastering a narrow set of commands and rituals while mistaking familiarity for depth. This Dunning–Kruger confidence feeds contempt for ordinary users and for systems that aim to be coherent and humane, as if usability were a flaw rather than the point. Instead of demanding better abstractions, the culture defends rough edges as character building. In that sense, Linux does not just fall short technically. It fosters an attitude that resists the ideals of clarity, empathy, and intellectual humility that the great figures of computing actually stood for.
>>107648868>I don't know about something so it doesn't existWindows has help for all the API functions and commands. How do you think developers write Windows programs?
>>107648931>dude just install some experimental bullshit on your computer what could go wrong
>>107648931>literally an example of op’s argument
>>107648973>>107648997Keep using Windows, not my problem.
>>107648950no one touches that 99% of users live in Chrome
How do I get my friends to use Telegram? It is so much better than other slop applications.
>>107648008you ask themwhat the fuck else do you expectgod damn these threads just keep getting more and more retarded And NO I'm not fucking reading that retarded wall of text that you posted to be edgy
By "so much better" you mean "RT and its reposts is blocked in the USA on it"
>>107648008Better how?
What are you working on /g/?
>>107648991You're valid, Sister.
>>107648991i love kita
Why is PC stagnating HARD?
>>107645188>Normalfags do not understand deferred costsYoure just poor. Probably a jeet. In the first world, $1000 is a chumps change
>>107640614Because you won't rape scam altman to death
>>107648591I buy cars for less than $1000
>>107640614Why doesn't the PS5 have any games?
>>107649047>I buy cars for less than $1000every car I've seen in the US below 1000 has a gaping hole somewhere, I mean if you can put it back together
Users of all levels are welcome to ask questions about GNU/Linux and share their experiences.*** Please be civil, notice the "Friendly" in every Friendly GNU/Linux Thread ***Check the Wikis (most troubleshoots work for all distros):wiki.debian.orgwiki.archlinux.orgwiki.alpinelinux.org>Which distro should I choose?gnu.org/distros/free-distros.htmlnosystemd.org>What are some cool programs?suckless.org>What are some cool terminal commands?Comment too long. Click here to view the full text.
Does Lubuntu have the same telemetry and shit that regular Ubuntu ships with now?
>>107645791Bazzite posters are known for starting distro wars and spreading FUD
>>107648337Rutracker might have one, difficult to say. Or cgpersia. That sounds dubious but at least it was a legit source for professional graphics software. Haven't used it in years.
>>107643821I've used a swapfile for hibernation and it works fine without any issues>>107644527I've never had to worry about this, maybe grub or the initramfs generating program handles it automatically?
>>107647144It's great for my torrent machine.