How come C# isn't more popular when it's basically Java but better? Is it because people distrust a language maintained by Microsoft, or does the JVM have non-obvious but crucial advantages over the CLR?
It got decent only "recently". Framework and Core are night and day; people that tried framework probably (rightfully) hated it and dropped C#.t. C# dev that recently got moved to legacy projects
>>107849932nah framework was chill. the real problem with it is that you have to interface with microjeet systems in almost every C# project
>>107847949lol, a cshart guy tried to pitch that on a product we were buildinghe was given the chance to build the frontendit was so bad he rage quit half way through
>>107835082I had the unfortunate experience of seriously giving the .NET 9 or whatever NativeAOT features a try like ~8 months ago and it was just genuinely unusable. Soooooo much does not yet work. Graal, on the other hand, generally supports most use cases; even heavy reflection and stuff, you can just let it profil firt and do most of it for you and/or just pre-define some rules like you would if you were to use an obfuscator like Proguard, ZKM, etc.Also RIP Excelsior JET.
>>107834144Java just werks
New Graphics Edition Previous Thread: >>107724782
>>107847868you better stop faggyng around
>>107848009
>>107804133pape please?
>>107848110do not stop faggyng
*sends other UNIX boxes to /dev/null*heh, nothing personnel
why is brave so popular among normies? literally every irl normalfag i know has this shit installed and they always say the exact same lines like "this browser is better because it bocks ads by default" or "this browser is more secure and private" or "brave is better because it doesn't eat your ram and is faster"where did they learn this nonsense? they all look like brainwashed ignorants
>>107849697I was mostly shilling it to annoy the autistic neocities guy that was obsessed with brave. But I got bored of it when he stopped taking the baits as much.
>>107849597Maybe they're right?
cause its chrome with a working adblocker, and blocks yt ads. and it also works on ios.
>>107849597>why is [x] popular among normies?
>>107849597Never joining the blink botnet. I'm stuck with Firefox no matter how much Mozilla abuses me.But yeah, I don't know. Brave's crypto spam and stuff always rubbed me the wrong way. Plus, while I assume their adblocker is [probably] faster, it's not actually even fully compatible with all ABP/uBlock rules anyway, so... Never saw the need for a weird Chromium reskin that just redirects your data to them instead of Google.Did any of these browsers finally get offline translation support like Firefox, and I /think/ Safari? Full-page machine translation was always the one kind of killer thing for me about them, but when Mozilla began rolling their local version out years ago, I basically stopped opening anything Chromium for any reason other than double-checking design and js functionality.
>Steven Bartlett, the founder and host of The Diary of a CEO podcast, took a chance on an applicant with a virtually blank CV for that very reason.>“I hired someone who’s CV was two lines. Their experience was zero,” Bartlett explained in a recent LinkedIn post. “Much of the reason why I gave her the job was because: She thanked the security guard by name on the way into the building.”>“When she didn’t know something, in the interview she said ‘I don’t know that yet, but here’s how I’d figure it out,’” Bartlett explained. “After the interview she went and self-taught herself the answer she didn’t know, and emailed it to me within hours.”>The founder took a chance on the experience-less candidate, and it didn’t take long to pay off; Bartlett said that six months later, she has proved herself as one of the best hires he’s ever made. “Fifteen years of hiring has taught me that culture fit and character is MUCH harder to hire than experience, skills or education.” https://fortune.com/2026/01/08/diary-of-a-ceo-founder-steven-bartlett-hired-someone-zero-work-experience-thanked-security-guard-before-interview/
>>107847317down syndrome will smith lookin' ass nigga
>>107847317>a literal who's
>>107847317>hires foidThese 2 words together made me read 'fires foid'. Spent the whole text wondering why he'd fire a woman for 'being exceptional'. Think covid fucked my memory in weird ways. Swear I'm making more mistakes in reading and typing nowadays, as well as remembering.
>>107850222Lol, just network, and keep a linkedin profile, bro. Don't forget to curate your own blog and seize every opportunity which comes your way!
>>107850222Probably only need a few to start and then snowball off those once you establish yourself. But you need to actually socialize.
What is the deal with programmers coping that they won't be replaced by AIs
>>107845213If ai can replace programmers, then it can replace all jobs. People should be much more worried than they seem to be about a world where the value of human labor is essentially zero.
>>107847378This shit doesn't work the same way when it comes to debugging and maintenance.
>>107850227You're replying to a super-obvious spambot.
This already happens nowadays. Kaspersky Lab was dumbfounded when analysing the Duqu Trojan (Stuxnet predecessor) : they found an "unknown language" which turned out to be Object Oriented C (OO C).https://www.theregister.com/2012/03/19/duqu_trojan_mystery/
>>107850259definitely just a shitpost, but okay, shizo.
why are boomers allowed to regulate computers
>>107831645You see in 1984 and others where the protagonist is literally a janitor who loves the evil gov and strong leaders because democracy has weak leaders.
>>107831857It's sad - when you explain that this is exactly the playbook of every distopian government - they say you're overreacting. When you explain that supporting this is exactly like supporting Hitler in 1930s - they supported this. Ask them if they still agree - and they never talk to you again - but here we go. Schnell!
>>107835878I'm sure the web jannie who gets paid £35k per year was punished for this blunder, while the people who were legally responsible for ensuring confidentiality are in line to be knighted.
>>107831652This is an anglosphere thing not an euro thing
>>107839954>BBC is heritageBut... it is? Their original productions put the current British values front and center. Perhaps you appreciate *past* British values more than current ones. As do I, but my excuse is that I'm a foreigner.>>107841638This.
>no more human input in jeetoverflow>no more copymonkeys>"""AI""" has no more new solved problems input to train properly>answers (if any) made by bots recycling their own slop>quality collapses>now jeets can't vibecode
>>107850115I'm still copying code from stackoverflow.There's just not reason to ask questions there anymore.
>>107850115saaar doo not redeem
>>107850115Technological progress stopped in 2023. No new information is created anymore. People's brains get athropied by AI, and AI can do only so much by eating its own slop.
>It was already declining GPT CHANGED NOTHING!lol people still really say this after this insane cliff diveoh well nobody will miss themthey hated questions anyway and the founders sold it in 2021 at the height of usage and retarded covid overvaluation
>>107850154>indiscriminate use of model-generated content in training>indiscriminate useIrrelevant finding because no one does this. Models continue to get smarter since that article was published a year and a half ago despite using synthetic data.
Why has no big brand succeeded in the e-ink tablet space?Huawei and Lenovo tried and abandoned their productsAmazon has the Kindle Scribe series but it's AmazonBoox has nice hardware and features but typical Chinese brand software longevitySuprenote is mehRemarkable is trying to be Apple too hard
>>107849083Nova 2 was released in 2020.
>>107849112>2020 was 9 years ago
>>107826750Reading shits is dead in the TikTok brain rot era with seconds long attention span.
>>107826750Obviously not enough people want them. I have Boox tablet, and while I like it and would like other devices with the tech, most normies would hate using it
eink is expensive slow and stupid
when it comes to it how do you "prove" that model was trained on particular data
Generally, you don't have to. The DMCA operates on a more likely than not standard of evidence.
chuu lost
for what purpose?
>>107845482I miss my titan pocket fuckin shit
>>107843062I feel like this one is clearly a scam meant to capitalize on the Clicks Communicator hype. This product does not actually exist and never will.
>>107843062I use this brand! I am on their Jelly Star. Outdated android version (13) but I'm always behind because I don't live on my fucking phone. Well worth the $200 I spent on this pebble of a phone. I might check out this titan 2 just for a termux device
>>107843608I loved my old Jolla with the snap-on magnetic keyboard. But I've gotten too used to touch screen keyboards by now to ever go back to a physical phone keyboard, unless they can make one that folds out to a full size computer keyboard or something.
it's over. the infinite AI investment money is drying up.
>>10784734080% of ai users are from india
>>107849943Good morning saar
>>107847274Am I supposed to know what that site is?
>>107848165If you structure your "expenses" well enough and are good at bullshitting people, you can be a "serial entrepreneur" and burn other people's money for decades with virtually 0 consequences.Hell, you might even get lucky and your scam might actually take off as a real business. It's a really no-lose situation (until zero-interest credit dries up).
>>107847463You are literally making this shit up. The "brown people" who would think it's voodoo don't have Internet nor do they know it even exists. They live on like a dollar a month.AI is extremely popular on the Internet browns like Indians, because it enables them to do what they do way more efficiently. That being scamming senile white boomers out of whatever wealth they have left so it doesn't go to their children. Not that the boomers would give it to their children anyway.
Hello /g/I made a list of what I've done at home/want to do, and I'd like further suggestions from here:PC.................................................Done (obviously)Personal ISP (via RIPE NCC) ..... DoneCustom modem.............................DoneCusom router.................................DoneFiber optics....................................DonePersonal cluster.............................In progressPersonal server..............................Done (needs expansion, currently 500 TB, want a PB)Personal VPN.................................DoneSelfhosted e-mail............................DoneSelfhosted website..........................DoneSaying this upfront, I woun't host a slopbot, so LLM bros gtfoComment too long. Click here to view the full text.
offsite operation for backups
>>107848164Not a bad idea, I wonder if I should do it before or after I expand the server.The prudent approach would be before.ThanksAlso the jannies tried to IP block me lmao
>>107848522>Also the jannies tried to IP block me lmaobecause everything that is not shitting on AI or praising Linux is against ""board culture""
>>107845748Aren’t you sticking out like a sore thumb doe? I watched once this def con presentation where hacker dude argue that hiding in plain sight (e.g using gmail) gives you more stealth/privacy than all things you do.
>>107845922drpeering.net has some tutorials etc on how bgp between ISPs works in practice
Light themes are objectively superior to dark themes, why do so many people still choose dark?
>>107838050i think its vim
>>107848566That might be a problem with your terminal. I've had it with Kitty for example, really thin fonts on light themes, no such issue with Foot.
>>107849092This.I lived without syntax highlighting for a long time and I could continue to live without it.I only use syntax highlighting because I like the pretty colors.
>>107846645>>107846719Yea this is way better than colored text, is this vim?
Didn't your mom tell you to not read in the dark? That's essentially what you are doing with dark theme. If you are going to unnaturally stare at screens from close distance, at least attempt to do it in an environment with natural level of lighting.Some study found said that the lack of natural light exposure is one of the potential causes nearsightedness and eye diseases, could be related to the brightness (sun light is very bright), but also the lack of infrared frequencies in led lighting.Likely the most optimal setup health-wise would be using a 65" tv at a distance, with light theme, in a well-lit room and add some infrared heat lamps to balance out the blue light.
Zoomer here. I heard from my teacher today that phones used to have a slot like the sim card one where you could put in those digital camera memory sd cards in it. Why did no one complain when this happened?
>>107849843>I've purchased maybe 100 microsds theres your answer, you retire them before they shit the bedits the sensible thing to do, but certainly not what the average consumer willbut ive had barely used cards nuke themselves, and they werent even from unreliable brands
>>107849324I was about to clown you for posting vaporware, but they're actually making these now. This shit could kill everything if it's stable.
Apple never had micro SD slots in their phones and then everybody was just copying the iPhone. For lots of people iPhone was their first smart phone and they never even looked at Android, so a large portion of the market never missed it. The others offered microSD but basically most customers valued thinner phones and phones with larger batteries higher than having a microSD slot. So generation by generation of phones less and less phones had it until nobody offered it. For manufactures it is just easier, less space needed, less moving parts, less stuff that can go wrong, easier to water proof, lower RMA rates.Modern mobile data also leads to people just storing everything in the "cloud" and not caring, shrinking the market for that even further.
>>107849066> Why did no one complain when this happened?where did you get that part from?
>>107849066>How Come No One Spoke Up When They Came For The SD Card Storage Slot?Because at the time flash storage was extremely cheap and it seemed phones would have large capacity internal memory. 10+ years later we're still getting phones shipping with 128GB of storage while the OS and apps have ballooned in size.
I'M CLOUD GAMING THIS YEAR
>>107841732So? And what are you doing about this?
>Not holding on to your old hardware like it's gold both PCs AND consoles Goycattle
>>107848354You don't need more
>>107842091This.We will never reach the level of SDXL kino again.It's over.
just buy a steam deck