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File deleted.
>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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>>
>>107728868
>multithreaded emacs
M-x list-threads
>>
>work uses geopackage
>used emacs *Scratch*, some elisp to directly query the geopackage the client had problems with
>manager and client started treating me as a wizard because of
(let ((db (sqlite-open "myfile")))
(sqlite-select "query")) ;; C-u C-x-e and paste it into teams

I'm not even a heavy elisp user. I stumble through most of it.
>>
>>107744948
Thanks anon. I'm not sure, I haven't really thought about it. Where else should I post it?
>>
>>107745154
If you already know where you'd host the code, I would find it reasonable to just check whether the repo has appeared every once in a while. A blog or whatever would also be fine, should you already have one. In any case, don't feel obligated to do any of this if you don't want to. I'll just try to check in every once in a while and hopefully stumble upon it again.
>>
>>107745273
Oh sure, I'll just put it on my github: https://github.com/jfaz1

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Do any of you use this? Is it usable in practice?
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>>
>>107743986
>Qubes have passwordless sudo and are relatively unhardened by default compared to a standard Linux installation, so doing everything in one Qube can actually be worse than just using typical Linux from a security standpoint
that might be correct if you're using just one qube with paswordless root.
>If you're not compartmentalizing, then you're doing Qubes wrong.
it's not a matter of right or wrong. you claimed it offered no extra value, which I disagreed with explanation.
>>
I also daily drive it on 4.3 rn but been using since 4.2 came out

Haven't figured out how to use a dgpu to work so when I dualboot to linux mint when i want touse my 1060
>>
Anyone else on the simplex server for qubes?
>>
>>107738449
>Is it usable in practice?
I like the concept., buuuuuut...
Last time I checked, it doesn't have sound, which makes this distro not suitable for gaming, video nor music. Has this changed?
Probably good for making a turnkey system your grandma can use to browse the web and use email without breaking it.
>>
>>107745270
Pulseaudio is used as a server client model with dom0 being the server and the vms as the clients

They do have a pipewire plug-in but it might not be default

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Wtf happened to their reverse image search? It's even worse than Google's now.
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>>
>>107736822
they moved moved into the EU
where tech goes to die
>>
>>107736822
try turning off moderate search filter
>>
>>107742519
>setting resets itself constantly
dropped
>>
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>>107739301
In paleo-conservative countries the rule is any sexual activity outside of life long marriage is evil and immoral. They hold zero tolerance for sex outside of wedlock. Though the AoC for them historically is 2 to 4 years lower. In feminist countries today (such as the US) any sexual activity a day below 18 is evil and immoral and enforced by laws of government.

Both paleo conservatives and feminist claim certain sexual behavior is evil gross and immoral and they respond with strong emotional engagement when their values are violated. But they differ on what triggers it. I believe these morals go deeper then cultural norms. They reflect evolved instincts to ensure early human tribes had social cohesion. For cavemen 19,000 years ago having a tribe not fighting over mates and knowing who's kid belongs to who is far more likely to survive then tribes that didn't know whos parents the kids belonged to and bashed each other with clubs over who gets to mate with the women of the tribe.

All those morals people have. Rather it be life long monogamy, opposition to gay marriage, and 18 or wood chipper are just the result of prehistoric pressures put on ancestral humans. The strongest moral values some people hold (even if logical) came from evolutionary pressures .
>>
>>107736822
Okay Vishay

I just bought a 32Gib 512nvme i7-9850H quadro t1000 with a 4k panel for $400 on eBay (and uncle sam fucked me for 40 in taxes and 20 in shipping)--and I am regretting it and wish I bought the cheaper $330 1080p 48gib option but bought this one because I thought that the 4k panel might be good since 1080p is a bit bad for split screen latex but am now regretting it since it will
- Drain battery faster (might take up 20% extra)
- Be a pain to use because I will be forced to set it to 200% scaling for a good experience with my external 1080p monitors (probably, I have never used 4k but xorg will likely strangle me too)
- Cost more
- Doesn't have as much ram
- At 15.6" and normal sitting, I probably won't ever notice

I don't think it has been shipped yet but also don't want to try to return it since that might make me an asshole...I will have to go check if the seller even accepts returns...

I am really crying over this...why is life so hard?
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>>
>>107745102
If you got free shipping, you're gonna lose at least $30 plus 30% of the final sale price trying to flip it for just your money back
>>
>>107733509

you write latex for cinnamon crisps and sweet tea or is whole thread a joke
>>
>>107743929
>>>107743842 (You)
>You coreboot chromebooks to turn them into normal UEFI laptops, this way you can run any linux distro without relying on the "developer mode" options in your rapidly aging version of chromeOS
Oh--I didn't know they restricted that; that makes sense.

>>107744266
>>It's up to you if you want the 1080p one. It's cheap and p53 is okay for linux and light 3d
What would be a good price to try to offer if I decide to? Or is it better to just wait as of now?

>>107745149
>>>107745102
>If you got free shipping, you're gonna lose at least $30 plus 30% of the final sale price trying to flip it for just your money back
I didn't get that one because of a shipping problem but the taxes I paid would have made it a loss if I would have tried to resell it on eBay, and to a lesser extent, the shipping, but somehow it wasn't that much either.
>>
>>107733509
>I thought that the 4k panel might be good
You fucked up.
Learn from your mistake.
Buy once, cry once.
>>
>>107737643
corebooting lets you turn off/defang the ime

>>107737667
that's apg tranny nonsense, my friend

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How is RedoxOS coming along? It'd be nice to have a usable microkernel operating system.
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>>
>>107741499
That's because monolithic kernels have never been tried. No, not even Linux. It's a hybrid LARPing as a monokernel, but it's not. The Finnish retard copied the API from a self-admitted microkernel (Minix), whose explicit purpose was to keep complicated shit out of kernelspace.

A true monokernel wouldn't block on open and reads. A true monokernel would allow you to create sockets and FDs in batches. A true monokernel would have compound functions (open + mmap + close) for the most common patterns.
>>
>>107742231
Also, a true monokernel would've probably used something like shared mappings between user and kernel to properly utilize memory layout and out-of-order execution, and write-lock the plot upon submission to make sure that the thread cannot modify the data in mid-flight. *And our current hardware doesn't support that very well* because the page table is a process-wide resource, not a thread-local one - meaning that, if you write-lock pages, you end up with per-core TLB shootdowns that can easily take much longer to complete than just copying all parameters from userspace to kernelspace, even if it's an in-order copy.

Oh, and speaking of TLB shootdowns:
>batched mmap
>>
>>107740569
>How is RedoxOS coming along?
Well, is it at all? They had an interesting idea about "everything is a URL" but them went back on that fo rmore UNiX like philosophy. And that was after all the drama and purges. So after 10 years it is still not as advanced or usable as Linux was after 4 years.
>>
>>107742231
>That's because monolithic kernels have never been tried. No, not even Linux. It's a hybrid LARPing as a monokernel, but it's not.
Monolithic kernels are brain damage because it means they have no loadable drivers or modules. Everything has to be compiled into one binary blob, so all your GPU drivers, USB drivers, file systems, all hardware you will ever support, is compiled into one blob.

>The Finnish retard copied the API from
He copied it from Unix.

>A true monokernel wouldn't block on open and reads. A true monokernel would allow you to create sockets and FDs in batches. A true monokernel would have compound functions (open + mmap + close) for the most common patterns.
That's just a non-Unix-like design and has nothing to do with monolithic or microkernels. Windows NT, VMS, and IBM mainframe OSes have a non-blocking asynchronous design. Microkernels are also inherently non-Unix-like, because anything similar to Unix is provided as user mode processes. They don't even have the concept of a file system or opening or reading files because that's handled by programs outside the kernel.

>>107742281
>Also, a true monokernel would've probably used something like shared mappings between user and kernel to properly utilize memory layout and out-of-order execution
That has nothing to do with monolithic or microkernels either.
>>
>>107743317
>They had an interesting idea about "everything is a URL"
It followed pretty naturally from the network transparency features of most microkernels before it. Have they really abandoned the idea?
>So after 10 years it is still not as advanced or usable as Linux was after 4 years.
Not the same thing, Linux was slotted into the existing GNU ecosystem that had been worked on for a decade already, whereas Redox is effectively starting from scratch (bar rustc) and has much more complicated modern hardware to deal with.

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This is ChatGPT told a schizo who stabbed his mom and himself to death
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>>
>>107743797
I think the fact that it caused the schizo to murder a defenseless elderly woman is the real problem here.
>>
>>107743966
This is murrica, nobody gives a shit about random murder around here
and since sex is forbidden due to being a puritan hole there will never be "dude rapes his helpless 14yo neighbor due to chatgpt" so nothing will ever happen
>>
>>107744421
They’ll find a way to make that claim
>>
>>107738768
>implying they ever stopped sacrificing to moloch
>abortions are totally not slaughtering babies since forever
>evolution is not transforming you to a selfish sadistic animal at all
>money is not a god dude, it's just a tool
>>
The shine of ai is wearing off int he corporate setting as well. I work in a large corporation somewhat near the middle and managers are furious with ai generated content. It's always bad, any summaries made, any documents written just contain errors and stacks of errors, falsehoods, sometimes such that could get the company in legal trouble. There was one girl who ai generated a contract with a subcontractor and my god the shit in there would have bankrupted us.

There will be a serious tightening of ai usage in most corporations, ai is not ony useless it is actively harmful. I'm talking about LLMs here mostly. The engineers are using their own machine algos or open source stuff for simulation aid where ai is indeed useful, but openais chatbot can fuck right off.

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Why are iPhones very easy to hack?
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>>
>>107741078
>Waiting for updates from an unstable mentally ill schizo
Yeah, naw
>>
>>107740987
kek
>>
Not so hard when company put a literal hardware backdoor on them
https://arstechnica.com/security/2023/12/exploit-used-in-mass-iphone-infection-campaign-targeted-secret-hardware-feature/
>>
>>107745155
>not so hard
That was extremely hard and one of the most sophisticated iOS zero days ever documented. It's right in the aricle title
>4-year campaign backdoored iPhones using possibly the most advanced exploit ever
>>
>>107745190
Without the hardware backdoor they would have only used the xploit for a month or so, not 4 years

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>take CS class at uni (for fun, not my major)
>this is what the other students are coding on
And then you wonder why we need H1B indians
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>>
1. This thing has a web broswer which probably supports wasm
2. You can run https://copy.sh/v86/ in a web browser
3. From 1 and 2 it follows that this machine is at least as capable as an old PC
4. Old PC is usable for writing software if your code and your tools are fast
5. From 3 and 4 it follows that this machine is perfectly usable for programming
>>
>>107742334
> There's nothing wrong with the new generation of kids growing up on locked down toy appliances and never knowing what it's like to actually own and control your own property
yeah the world is fucked. this picture nails it >>107731253
Fuck that anons racism though
>>
>>107742488
Really cool site, but its making even my desktop fans start spinning fast when I try to run the desktop environment on the Arch image. Crazy that this is even possible, but its not gonna work on an IPad.
>>
>>107742507
>owning and controlling your property is lugging around 6 pounds of ewaste with 2 hours battery life
college isn’t a place to fiddle with your bashrc and audio drivers
>>
The ifags are going wild in this thread dunking on lincucks, completely oblivious to the fact that productive members of society program on windows "gaming" laptops.
>muh spyware muh recall muh performance
Cope. I have a macbook and a linux NAS too, but windows has almost all modern and old software available, which makes development that mush easier

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Users of all levels are welcome to ask questions about GNU/Linux and share experiences.

*** Please be civil, notice the "Friendly" in every Friendly GNU/Linux Thread ***

Before asking for help, please check our list of resources.

If you would like to try out GNU/Linux you can do one of the following:
0) Install a GNU/Linux distribution of your choice in a Virtual Machine.
1) Install a GNU/Linux distribution of your choice on bare metal and run your previous OS in a Virtual Machine.
2) Use a live image and to boot directly into the GNU/Linux distribution without installing anything.
3) Go balls deep and replace everything with GNU/Linux.

Resources: Please spend at least a minute to check a web search engine with your question.
Many free software projects have active mailing lists.


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>>
>>107744671
What is the brand name? Some peripherals have firmware issues and this applies to mice even.
If it is fully USB compliant it should not vibrate because usb is a standard, so it's more likely a kernel module issue afaik.
>>
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>>107744384
>changed image hash so people can't see you already posted it over 9000 times
>>
>>107744671
Also: you can probably reset the firmware of the controller by pressing 'home' button when plugging it in or something but this can vary.
8bit do controllers have this feature for example.
>>
>>107744708
It's Onn, the generic walmart brand.
Hmm.. holding the home button while plugging it in put it into some kind of state. The power light just stayed blinking and it wasn't vibrating, but it's not being picked up at all is lsusb.
>>
>>107744959
>>107744671
Okay, me again. I went ahead and created /etc/modprobe.d/blacklist-hid-nintendo with "blacklist hid_nintendo"
rebooted, manually loaded xpad
plugged controller in, it attempted to handshake with nintendo, failed, and connected as hid-generic, then immediately fell back to xbox 360.
So, it's working now. The solution was blacklisting hid_nintendo since that seems to be how it's trying to connect.

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/biz/ herre.
How is AI not another dot-com bubble?
What are its practical applications, aside from porn generation and helping high schoolers with their homework? How does it make money?
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>>
>>107740275
Microsoft is strong-arming companies into including copilot in their new volume licenses for Windows and Office products. There is an article somewhere where a sales rep just left the bargaining table when the customer refused to consider Copilot, because that’s the only thing they get bonuses for at the moment.

Nobody is paying for this shit personally, it’s paid for by corporate, who justify it because it gets retard investor bucks flowing in, not because it had any proven productivity benefits. Being bean-counting retards, they then force it onto workers to try and maximise its value. It’s capacity to improve productivity is poorly proven, and some studies indicate it reduces productivity.

Furthermore, it’s likely that the 300€ plans are still losing Microsoft money. OpenAIs 200USD/month plan makes a loss.

With regards to data centres, Microsoft and Google might be able to tank the huge hit, much like giants like IBM and Cisco could tank the Dotcom bubble, but just because some people don’t die in a plague doesn’t make it a good thing. The exposure to risk that many investment firms (and by extension 401ks, banks, e.t.c.) are exposed to means the insane debt being taken out on vague deliverables will blow up catastrophically if it doesn’t work, and ripple through the rest of the economy, taking out businesses only tangentially related. The economy will stagnate and people will become poorer. This is not a good outcome.
>>
>>107740616
>like the space race
man but at least that was cool and some of the materials they invented during that became useful for everyday life. So far with AI, it just means there's now more slop in my life.
>>
>>107740939
What, significantly worse off? Advertised to every minute of the day, harvested for data, systematically priced out of owning any significant assets, left with an aging population that will not have enough young people to care for them? The average person is worse off now than they were in the 2000s.

Furthermore, more specifically, the Dotcom bubble blew up numerous companies, fucked a lot of finances and stagnated the economy until 2006ish, when it was promptly blown up again for different retarded reasons. The web is not useless, but the valuations at the time were absolutely retarded, completely unattached from actual useful businesses. It was the insane financing, valuations and investment decisions that made the Dotcom bubble, not the tech itself being flawed or useless. People didn’t want to miss out on the next big thing, and then promptly blew up their money investing into shit they didn’t understand, but was being hyped by investors who knew they could be the lesser fool in a shit investment and cash out.
>>
>>107737777
>How is AI not another dot-com bubble?
It probably is
>What are its practical applications, aside from porn generation and helping high schoolers with their homework?
Most useful application I can see is that it can be a better search engine, but the hallucination problem is intrinsic to this tech and also crippling to this use case, so it's all kinda meh in practice if you try to use it for real work where correctness and truth actually matter (let alone quality).
>How does it make money?
Right now it doesn't seem to make money at all. The tech is extremely expensive due to extreme hardware demand and like I said the actual productivity boost you get from it is dubious at best, at least in professions where truth and correctness matter. I think this is a serious flaw and it will continue to prevent these services from making any money.

It might have some real applications in domains where correctness and truth do not matter. Unfortunately these are mostly the artistic pursuits where fiction reigns, though even there you need internal consistency which is kind of the same thing. Still if you AI generate some artwork and it's good, then it's good and there's no objective correctness to strive for.

I could also see this sort of tech as something potentially cool if it can be applied properly to video games. I don't mean fully generating slop games or some shit, but including it as a mechanic. Imagine a game where the NPCs and the world can fully react to everything you do, or where you can have more free-form conversations with NPCs and so on. Might be cool, though of course even in this use case whatever "AI" is used has to be reined in so it doesn't do something retarded.
>>
>>107740245
Productivity should be measured in quality output, but lazy and incompetent workers don't want it to be measured like that. AI isn't even the real problem. The problem are the managers and any worker with managerial duties. Often times, the higher up in the ladder they go, the less coding they do, and the more incompetent they become. They start increasingly believing in their own delusional fantasies, which leads to disastrous results in the future.

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>/g/ makes an 18th album
Theme: Outer Space Music
Title: [Accepting suggestions]
Deadline: 14th of January

>/g/ makes a 19th album
Theme: [Accepting suggestions]

>Song submission rules/guidelines
Upload the file somewhere, preferably in a lossless format, and post the link here. If you want to update your track, make a new post.
Include the song title in the post, and make it clear that your song is a submission for the album.
Optionally you may include cover art for your track, but please confirm that the image in your post is the cover art or it won't be included. You may not use your real artist name.
Songs that contain anything against YouTube's policies won't be uploaded on YT, but will still be added to the album.
By default, tracks will be normalised to -14 LUFS (integrated loudness) in the release. You may specify a lower loudness for your track.
Use of AI is banned. This includes AI generated stems, samples, and effects. "AI" includes all neural network-based models and not hard-coded automation/procedural generation. You are allowed to ask an LLM about music-related questions, but asking it to give you musical ideas (eg. generating a chord progression) is already a no-no.

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>>
>>107739416
this is it I promise
>>
Modular synthesis
>>
>>107742290
But like, how many different good sounds are there, really?
>>
>>107742377
oh, I would say near zero, it's just something to fuck off with and play around on
>>
>>107738930
>Trance Vol.2 (JE8086 [the free JP-80X0 emulator] ONLY Edition!)

Vote for Trance Vol.2 (JE8086 [the free JP-80X0 emulator] ONLY Edition!) for the next album

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What kind of RAM fans do you guys use for DDR5 6000mhz?

I'm satisfied with this one, it keeps my ram running cool as a cucumber.
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>>
>>107744420
>>107744423
sorry guys this is my fault, I was googling water-blocks for ram earlier and it definitely woke up the algos
>>
>>107744798
>liquid cooling your ram
unfathomably based
>>
I just pee on it and call it water cooling
>>
>>107745017
What is R. Kelly doing here?
>>
>>107745017
Isn't that going to make it worse? Pee is body temp, my RAM runs cooler than that.

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>here’s your trillion dollar LLM bro
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>>
>>107741538
lmao llms are literally r*ddit-retarded and fundamentally broken
but I'm sure a few more trillion dollars will fix this amirite
>>
>>107741529
>>107741560
>>107741590
I'm amazed how faggy the replies are compared to even lighter local models.
>>
>>107743948
>In fact it is ASI for most questions
Only if you only ever ask midwit-tier questions.
>>
>>107744453
Gotta use all that ram somehow
>>
>>107741529
Did they really suck up all that DRAM for this?

This + Termux will be absolute kino.
It just needs a tab button
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>>
>>107743462
>ads keys
>runs slop
>>
>>107743462
>front camera
no thanks
>>
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>>107744093
>my screenplays
>>
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>>107744124
>Xitter spacing
>>
>>107743939
Dat hinge was awesome

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What's the equivalent of a win32 GUI on Linux?
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>>
>>107743191

i have not head of anyone who writes postscript
>>
>>107744841
>20 years ago
30 years ago in many cases.
Many software made for Windows 95 still run fine in Windows 11 25H2.
Meanwhile I had problems trying to make 8 year old software run on Linux
>binaries don't work, too outdated
>packages don't install, too outdated
>try to build from source
>fall into dependency hell
>give up
>>
>>107743191
win32(wine)
>>
>>107744706
To be fair, that password was for network logon. It was not intended to keep the local machine secure.
>>
>>107744706
you could simply ctrl+alt+del, enter Administrator in the login prompt and a blank password and press enter on Windows XP.


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