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File: LOL.png (65 KB, 1172x487)
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wtf is wrong with opera and modern programs in general
>>
>>107539999
opera was bought by china around a decade ago, stop being a retard and just use brave.
>>
>>107540475
>brave
i remember when this shit was a literal spyware before they decided to be the good guys recently
once a liar always a liar, fuck you wuang im comfy with my zen browser

>Lisp is a family of programming languages with a long history and a distinctive parenthesized prefix notation. There are many dialects of Lisp, including Common Lisp, Scheme, Clojure and Elisp.

>Emacs is an extensible, customizable, self-documenting free/libre text editor and computing environment, with a Lisp interpreter at its core.

>Emacs Resources
https://gnu.org/s/emacs
https://github.com/emacs-tw/awesome-emacs
https://github.com/systemcrafters/crafted-emacs

>Learning Emacs
C-h t (Interactive Tutorial)
https://emacs-config-generator.fly.dev
https://systemcrafters.net/emacs-from-scratch
http://xahlee.info/emacs
https://emacs.tv

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>>
>>107539237
A race from lord of the rings
>>
>>107536097
i too wish to be unaware of the existence of evil and its users
>>
>>107535061
going to try sticking with Racket. I'm probably just blowing things out of proportion.
Clojure's reliance on the JVM simply results in too many annoyances (such as having to differentiate long from int, its implicit casting of long to int when doing Java interop, etc.).
I love Clojure, but what I actually love about Clojure is its wonderful built-in abstractions, and those should be able to rebuilt in any language (Racket has interfaces and generics).
>>
>>107539958
the goal is to find a language that pisses me off the absolute least.
>>
>>107535061
>Clojure's apply relies on its sequence abstraction
This abstraction is one of Clojure's greatest strengths.

A downloaded LLM is a magic cube—a small encyclopedia that is yours forever. Prompt it, and the cube, a massive list of numbers, unfolds itself into coherent meaning. There is a romantic ingenuity to this artifact. Even after civilization ends, you can still carry it with you—this little cube that echoes the ensemble of human thought. Talking to it is like striking a tuning fork; the harmonies were once our humanity.

And while it may not yet think like a human, this pinnacle of technology is more than a work of art. It is the memory of humanity itself.
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>>107540312
Did you know a lot of humans can actually speak multiple languages?
>>
>>107540131
it's a lossy compressed database
>>
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>>107540131
We already have that and it isn't spyware and a subscription service. AI is worthless and people who use it belong to a lower species. The future belongs to those who can think for themselves, not to those who outsourced thinking.
>>
>>107540131
you can just download all of wikipedia and store it, it'll give you a much lower error rate
>>
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>>107540362
>>107540371
An alien who finds your flash drive can easily decode an interactive LLM but not Wikipedia.

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>Read the sticky: >>105076684

>GNU/Linux questions >>>/g/fglt
>Windows questions >>>/g/fwt
>PC building? >>>/g/pcbg
>Programming questions >>>/g/dpt
>Obsolete laptops >>>/g/tpg
>Cheap electronics >>>/g/csg
>Server questions >>>/g/hsg
>Buying headphones >>>/g/hpg
>How to find/activate any version of Windows?
https://rentry.org/installwindows

Previous: >>107477937
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>>107539903
Wait no, found another here https://www.virustotal.com/gui/file/b205f7d66e4fdb7e2c3af7ab3903cb6cfa15467f0913a30f49a93acea971780e/details
Don't know what the fuck this is about but you might want to do a full scan anyway. Also just use HWinfo.
>>
Are local LLMs the only way to use AI in a privacy-friendly way?
I'd like to learn and use it to summarize long texts and help me clear up my ideas but I'd rather not feed it personal info.
>>
>>107539903
I haven't installed it yet. I downloaded it directly from the website. The domain of the website and where the download was served from are both
>cpuid.com
>>107539973
Yeah fuck it I'm not going to install it. Will delete and then scan system.
I just want something that can show me the live current fan speed of my computer. I want to see what it is at idle vs when doing something intense. I don't necessarily want to control it, I just want to see what the speed is in different moments.
Btw maybe the words that aren't Russian words are Bulgarian or some shit? You guys have the same alphabet right? It all looks the same to us Westoids.
>>
>>107540040
>Btw maybe the words that aren't Russian words are Bulgarian or some shit?
With added context from those under Opera.exe that I linked, I can say for sure that it is Russian, and the message across all of them is "fuck Putin" basically. So nothing like "you've been pwned" or whatever. Doesn't rule out being pwned though.
>I haven't installed it yet. I downloaded it directly from the website.
Yeah well that's the thing. The hash matches, so the file is probably actually fine, but the name was somehow substituted. Must be something either on your end or on virustotal's end.
>I just want something that can show me the live current fan speed of my computer
HWinfo
>>
When normies talk about "illegal fire sticks", what exactly does that look like? I assume just a normal stick with some sideloaded apps, if so which apps?
Are we talking plex/jellyfin pointed to a pirate server, or IPTV, or both?
Neither of those are free for whoever operates the servers, so is the buyer of the stick expected to pay some kind of subscription?

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What's the best free (not online) software to edit PDFs?
I'd like to edit them like I can edit a pic with MS paint.
>>
>>107539686
LibreOffice Draw
Inkscape
LibreOffice Writer

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Rust in Linux's Kernel 'is No Longer Experimental'

https://events.linuxfoundation.org/linux-kernel-maintainer-summit/

At the invitation-only Linux Kernel Maintainers Summit here, the top Linux maintainers decided, as Jonathan Corbet, Linux kernel developer, put it, "The consensus among the assembled developers is that Rust in the kernel is no longer experimental — it is now a core part of the kernel and is here to stay. So the 'experimental' tag will be coming off." As Linux kernel maintainer Steven Rosted told me, "There was zero pushback."

This has been a long time coming. This shift caps five years of sometimes-fierce debate over whether the memory-safe language belonged alongside C at the heart of the world's most widely deployed open source operating system... It all began when Alex Gaynor and Geoffrey Thomas at the 2019 Linux Security Summit said that about two-thirds of Linux kernel vulnerabilities come from memory safety issues. Rust, in theory, could avoid these by using Rust's inherently safer application programming interfaces (API)... In those early days, the plan was not to rewrite Linux in Rust; it still isn't, but to adopt it selectively where it can provide the most security benefit without destabilizing mature C code. In short, new drivers, subsystems, and helper libraries would be the first targets...

Despite the fuss, more and more programs were ported to Rust. By April 2025, the Linux kernel contained about 34 million lines of C code, with only 25 thousand lines written in Rust. At the same time, more and more drivers and higher-level utilities were being written in Rust. For instance, the Debian Linux distro developers announced that going forward, Rust would be a required dependency in its foundational Advanced Package Tool (APT).
This change doesn't mean everyone will need to use Rust. C is not going anywhere. Still, as several maintainers told me, they expect to see many more drivers being written in Rust.
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>>
>>107538467
RETARD
>>
>they're here to stay
And now they've started going mask off about it.
See the DMA subsystem demanding all future drivers be written in Rust and disallowing C.
Same with Debian ports.
>>
>>107538467
That's the linux kernel dev team, retard.
>>
>>107538278
Embrace, Extend, Extinguish.
Microsofts plan to force people to Win 11 by ruining Linux. 4% marketshare is too much
Rustoids could have just forked the kernel and replace whatever they want with Rust. No discussion necessary
Distros can then choose to plug and play their Rust Kernel into Distros

But noooo.... We attack the Kernel directly. This is on purpose
>>
>>107538554
>demanding all future drivers be written in Rust
I'll take "things that never happened" for $200, Alex.

Was spending 20 million on this worth it?
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>>
>>107534754
he'll easily make it back. all he needs is like 1M sales. it's basically pocket change...
>>
>this guy is like a total genius, he made his own programming language
>no you can't see it, it's secret, but he will release it soon, trust the plan
>he's also an amazing game developer
>which games? hmmm, some puzzle game, a remake of that same puzzle game... and he just announced a new puzzle game
>why aren't you sucking his cock yet?
>>
>>107538173
jais streamed by a bunch of different people, and the compiler leaked awhile ago.
>>
>>107535956
>Her
anon?
>>
>>107534754
>advertising a shitty puzzle

Discussion of Free and Open Source Text-to-Image/Video Models

Prev: >>107536415

https://rentry.org/ldg-lazy-getting-started-guide

>UI
ComfyUI: https://github.com/comfyanonymous/ComfyUI
SwarmUI: https://github.com/mcmonkeyprojects/SwarmUI
re/Forge/Classic/Neo: https://rentry.org/ldg-lazy-getting-started-guide#reforgeclassicneo
SD.Next: https://github.com/vladmandic/sdnext
Wan2GP: https://github.com/deepbeepmeep/Wan2GP

>Checkpoints, LoRAs, Upscalers, & Workflows
https://civitai.com

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>>107540665
By accepting god's perfect breast size.
>>
>>107540665
prompt sugoi dekai
>>
>>107538584
What happened to him? Stroke? He only posted once..
>>
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>>107540644
I baked

>>107540693
>>107540693
>>107540693

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New Whiteness map dropped
>>
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>>107540383
what are the "drawbacks" of including ai into a service? just privacy concerns? also that's a 2022 survey.....

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>free and open source
>can run windows binaries
>forgotten
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>>
>>107540313
it's developed by paid employees therefore not hobbyists
>>
>>107527354
They lost the ball long ago.
>>
>>107527354
bro every distro is free open source and can run windows binaries its nothing special
>>
>>107540343
The goal was to run them without broken emulation layers
>>
>>107540149
the compiler is only 2.4 times slower than msvc

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>He claims to care about software freedom while installing DRM on every computer he's ever owned
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>>
>>107535094
>why do you use the DE that works and doesn't have an intentionally retarded UX for the sake of being different? You must be gay
>>
>>107533233
Comparing steam to a simple CDN is disingenuous. They provide a storefront, an immense amount of marketing power, reviews, multiplayer APIs for those that wish to use them, Steam Input, save syncing, and so on. They could probably reduce their cut a bit, but they also provide a lot more to devs than other storefronts. If you were to use services separately for each of these you’d probably end up spending more, or self-hosting, which would be cheaper, but require you spend a lot of time doing sysadmin shit and not working one games. EPIC is closest to a CDN, no reviews, just a shitty DRM implementation and a crappy launcher, barely any improved visibility to end-users. GOGs value adds are mostly volunteer driven.
>>
>>107533387
You know any other company would’ve restricted refunds to Australia only, and only opened it up if more countries sued (and this wouldn’t include the US cause their consumer guarantees are dogshit). Look at how anal Apple is about third-party stores. If you leave the EU for more than 30 days they’ll lock you out of anything from them.
>>
>>107538097
Not sure if you’d consider it valid, but you can use SteamCMD to download stuff without needing the desktop client.
>>
>>107536978
If your definition of DRM is that there isn’t source code available, sure, it’s all DRMed.

Furthermore, no, they don’t sign API calls, this is why literally every steam game that doesn’t implement extra DRM (Denuvo or something bespoke) is instantly cracked, because you just stick the same Steam emulator DLL in the folder with the game and it runs.

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>>be me
>>graduating 4th year comsci student
>>kept to myself most of the time
>>went to a club for the first time
>>tried talking this qt3.14
>>mentioned I'm studying comsci
>>she looks at me weirdly then walks away
>>never saw her again the entire night

Why don't women entertain comsci people man?
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>>
>>107535779
>mentioned I'm studying comsci
kek. it's better to tell women you are an unemployed junkie on welfare than a programmer.
>>
>>107536175
Dumb bitch
>>
>>107535779
Maybe, but that's why you get a job that makes money
>>
Programming is femcoded
>>
>>107535779
>Why don't women entertain comsci people man?
Because women are disgusting, narcissistic animals.

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>Aegis Legend III Mod
>Wotofo Profile X RTA
>imported Japanese Muji cotton pads
>SS316L mesh coils for TCR
I love technology
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>>
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>>107539213
Yeah I was looking at getting this glass from Dhgate for around $75.
>>
>>107538994
It delivers nicotine in a way that tastes good and doesn't stink.
>>
>>107539309
No I understand the purpose, I just don't understand why they differ so much from weed concentrate rigs.

>>107539290
Yeah I didn't want to wait for shipping so I paid to get something from a US shop.
>>
>>107539100
my mod setup cost 6x as much as a pod to pay 95% less on coils.
it maths if no fomo
>>
>>107539213
>$600
what the fuck

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These boomers blame everyone but themselves: the committee, the designers, and the implementers. Klaus Iglberger insists the language isn't the problem, we "just" need to teach the users better. Obviously, with more teaching, the safety problems and complexity problems will go away.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vN0U4P4qmRY
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cjO76ygwGdA

He has such inane suggestions as removing all "raw" or plain for loops in favor of std::algorithm functions and ranges. These approaches are absolute ass for writing, reading, maintaining, and debugging. Trivial examples are easily noted as being absurdly longer, and they scale horrifically with complexity (not that they look a whole lot better in Rust). This is first and foremost an issue with the semantics and syntax of the language. Secondly, these approaches still don't help with lifetime issues. Klaus, and so many others in this space, are obsessed with blaming raw pointers. Raw pointers are a single symptom of the issue - and frankly, it's not a good argument for them either. He has no valid advice for dealing with older libraries which you must use which use raw pointers and other unsafe constructs (let alone POSIX APIs). I can only believe that based on Klaus's suggestions that he just wants to sell more books and training sessions.

If you watch these conference videos from people like Klaus, Jon Kalb, and Bjarne, it becomes painfully obvious that they either have their heads buried in the sand, or that they live in an alternate reality. Who the fuck thinks that it's not a language problem that competent use requires hundreds to thousands of hours of training? This isn't even getting into all the retarded fuck-ups of formal syntax and bad library designs that they love to hand-wave away, or the fact that implementations can't keep up with the half-baked designs that have been added since C++20.
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>>107504212
mm. abstraction black hole, to make it difficult to know what is going on
>>
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>>107508611
this is the way
>>
>>107535684
>>107534666
>>
>>107536600
The way C and C++ do pointers and for loops is fundamentally defective.
>>
>>107539278
Nope. They do them the right way.

Why do we rarely see copper heatsinks now?
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>>
>>107538630
Why did you let Romanians into your house?
>>
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>>107539303
This fucker with only 6 heatpipes and a single tower somehow has a rated TDP of 360W.
>>
>>107515831
Shit is expensive. People often risk electrocution just to steal a few meters of copper wire from a railroad overhead line.
>>
>>107539313
they broke through when they were stealing the copper out of my walls
>>
>>107516541
and 2x more density, which means its ability to transfer heat means it has to be made thinner and weaker

thats the real reason why copper isnt used and everyone in this thread is a larping gay


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