what's your favorite computer in a movie?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sp1RwkOAUC0
>>107891561Thanks, that pic made me puke in my mouth a little.
how many inches is her penis? not bigger than me, i hope
>>107891561>"how do you do, fellow nerds?">"do you like it when I put myself in every shot, fellow nerds?">>107893606>"how do you like my feet, fellow nerds?"
WHY ARE THESE THREADS ALLOWED?
>>107891561now, this is a man and this is not an actual joke
I have some sources, that say that if Greenland crisis should escalate, there might be upcoming American Tech ban in EU. We’ve already been slowly de-Americanizing our stack, but now we’re thinking we may have to accelerate and get all workstations on Linux by Q3 this year.Currently looking at Infomaniak kSuite as a productivity alternative. Any suggestions for enterprise office/collab + Linux fleet management (SSO/IAM, updates, MDM-ish, remote support, security)? Management wants plan by the end of Q1 on the table ready for quick implementation should need arise. Fucking shitshow
>>107901909the dutch dont do shit, they act solely on american intelligence under american volition
>>107891886I don't use any cloud shit. I have a Gmail that I'd rather not lose as it's got boomer shit like banking stuff on it.Outside of that I couldn't care about anything else. Not on microcuck shiteware either
DEATH TO AMERICA!
>>107900006>product is developed in the US with an American as the lead dev with funding from an American non profit (The Linux foundation) which receives funding and development support primarily from American companies.>yeah that’s Finnish actuallyI guess I didn’t know Finns had honorary Romanian status
>>107891886>GDPR keeps corpos from ruining computing>Bill of Rights keeps you from getting arrested for shitpostingWhy can't we have all the cool stuff in one place?
Let me guess, you need more?
>>107904942https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLNLZVk0TSZFLy8y0DtINOfztuxbByxli0
>he needs more
>>107882179Yes, it is folly to try and play Captain Goodnight with paddles.
>>107902935It depended on which graphics mode. But yes, the high-res ones had fuck all space left for programs.The C64 was better for games (but only games) and the Speccy was cheap and its compromises gave some graphics with space for code too (and was the easiest to hack; if there'd been more online presence, this would have been a good platform for a demoscene).I used all three at various times. The really fun part was building custom hardware to allow them all to communicate (also with a PC I had, which had the space to run a homebrew toolchain).
>>107905404BBC had Teletext mode that requried just 1 KB which was probably the most space efficient graphics mode.
why do people think they need to reinstall Windows every 6 months?
>>107906146how do you finish a vidya if you're always restarting it everytime you playunless you mean restarting it after you beat the game in which case no shit
>>107905911>Why do X feel the need to so some shit that they don't actually do but I'm just posting it anyway look at meit's all so tiresome.
i dont understand people that can reinstall os or phone every two weeks like nothing, the whole distro hopping bullshitI am moving to a new install of windows cause >new pc>been using 10 educationand am paralyzed with having to reinstall so much shit and move files and all thatEspecially never understood it on phones either, people talk about installing a new custom rom weekly like its nothing
>>107905921still was the case with w 8.1. didnt use 10 long enough in one shot to check that (had to format it more often than that because of these oh so wonderful impromptu updates. then i nuked the malware off my computer)afaik, the biggest culprit- registry
>>107906240>how do you finish a vidyaThat's the thing, I don't!
Lets's settle this once and for allWhich was the last good ThinkPad?Was it T480 from 2018 for T series, because the next model wasn't as upradeable (I think?)?Was it X270 from 2017, because it was last model from X series with removable battery or do we need to go deeper?
>>107903910grr get pregnant grr erotic armpit slut
>>107903753marisa bee
>>107902578x301thread, etc
>>107902578laptops really didn't need to go past this desu
The India Threshold is an observable and realistic accomplishment that will determine if robots have become useful to humanity. If they are able to clean that shit-hole of a country, they have shown measurable worth to us all. If they can't, they will prove their worthlessness.
>>107904931These kinds of people drop or redefine the definitions of words whenever it suits their argument. It wastes time playing these stupid semantic games and they think they're really intelligent for it.
>>107904846Being "impressive" which is the exact word you used before wouldn't be synonymous with "objective architectural standards" if such a thing were to exist. It impresses me that it's golden, it impresses me that it's large, it impresses me that it's colorful, it's history impresses me. Conversly it's so gold that it's gaudy, it's intimidatingly large, it's so saturated it looks like it was shat on a by a unicorn, it's history is extracting coin from peasants or being a place of massive bloodshed. Those are not universal standards.>Anyone could think anything about any particular buildingThat true because of what I actually said but again that is not what I actually said.For someone who'd type the phrase "semantic games" you sure do love shuffling words around.
>>107895678>If they are able to clean that shit-hole of a country, they have shown measurable worth to us all.You don't need robots to do that, you need nuclear weapons.
>>107895678she cute
Bohoo get shit on hack
most sci-fi books and entertainment show future as a bustling mega cities of people working , living and going on their days like it's 20th century. But why would we live in dense large cities when there'll be no need for office space, hotels for business travelers and restaurants to please workers.Won't future just be villas and resorts of rich people being served by robots and leading hedonistic lifestyle after culling majority of humanity via a virus made by their god like AI. There won't be a need for pilots , engineers , programmers or soldiers when it can all be automated the future will probably just end up with us living hedonistic lifestyles while robots do work.
A Solarpunk short: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MT4g_oaWBdU
>>107902799Kurt Gödel's Theorem of Incompleteness + Problem of P vs NP + P ≠ NP + Problem of Induction = AGI impossibleIt's too bad she won't live, but then again who does?
>>107903700>Kurt Gödel's Theorem of Incompleteness + Problem of P vs NP + P ≠ NP + Problem of Induction = AGI impossibleHow does this follow?And since humans have general intelligence, I cannot see how computers cannot have so too. >It's too bad she won't live, but then again who does?The quote is good but better yet: insufficient data for a meaningful answer.
>>107903700Humans can't solve every problem. Why would you expect AGI to?
>>107895900>hedonistic lifestylesThat was the premise for the plot in The LIghtstream Chronicles.https://thelightstreamchronicles.com/webcomic.htmlIn practice, we are more likely to see a collapse caused by the Iron Law of the Oligarchy.
And what do you carry in it? I'm talking about small compartment bags, not backpacks.
>>107906204What compels men to take pictures of their gay little gadgets like this?>I don't own a small compartment bag.
>>107906204I carry my keys, a comb, a simple swiss army knife, a tin of altoids, and a wallet. since 2000 I carry a phone. I have never needed to carry much more than that ever. when I worked in IT I carried a metal clipboard that could hold papers and such. I used that to carry all my clients usernames and passwords. in other news I had ALL my clients usernames and passwords ALL OF THEM. tech support is so much easier that way.
In the grand tapestry of Western civilizational development, the evolution of computational instruments represents a fundamental struggle between the expansive, specialized elite and the stagnant, institutionalized masses. To observe the rivalry between Texas Instruments and the Hewlett-Packard legacy is to witness a war between mandatory textbook compliance and unfiltered engineering dominance.The practitioner who wields a DM41X, fortified with the CCD, SandMath, and 41Z modules, does not merely use a tool; they command a specialized scientific instrument. Herein lies the reality of why TI-virgins cannot occupy the same operational plane as the 41Chads:The RPN "Barrier:" The TI-virgin is trapped within the "Infix" notation, a mess of nested menus and the chaotic struggle of parentheses. Conversely, the 41Chad operates within the disciplined hierarchy of RPN. While the virgin frantically checks if he closed the bracket on a sin function, the Chad hits the operator and watches the stack execute with cold certainty.Institutional vs. Operational: TI maintains a "stranglehold" on the educational establishment, producing designs for 15-year-olds seeking the path of least resistance. Their builds are lightweight plastic with mushy buttons. The DM41X is a stainless steel and glass tank; one does not "tap" it, the 41Chad engages it.The Library of Alexandria: The TI /v/irgin is limited to clunky TI-Basic scripts. The 41Chad has inherited forty years of professional M-Code. While the TI /v/irgin is Googling "how to do a Bessel function," the SandMath module has already calculated it using microcode forged for aerospace engineers.Aesthetic Vitality: The TI-84 is the "beige minivan" of math... ubiquitous and mandated by the state. The DM41X is the vintage-inspired supercar. To reveal a 41-series instrument in a room of TI-virgins is to pull a fountain pen in a room of crayon users.
>>107897643Can it run vim/gcc/OpenSSH? That's all I care about.
>>107904008>monetizing clipping old junk to new junk with a 30 minute monologue about responsible boarding.This is not pornography.
>>107903221Kek, move your rpn operations to Forth already, join the winning team.
I use RealCalc on Android because it has RPN mode. It's a great little calculator.
this is the most cringe loser bullshit i think i've ever seen. gratz op
What are some good use cases for this folding phone? Anyone here own it?
>>107905901I had a pixel 6 and I would never ever recommend buying pixel phones, literally jeet tier garbage
>>107905901>I want even more points of failure in my already fragile phone
>>107905901looks retarded
>>107601582"The further a society drifts from the truth, the more it will hate those that speak it."--George Orwell>CyberpunkThe FAQ: https://sizeof.cat/post/cyberpunk-faq/What is /cyb/erpunk?: https://pastebin.com/pmn9vzWZHow do I into /cyb/erpunk?: https://pastebin.com/5tpNFQdsHuge list of cyberpunk media: https://sizeof.cat/post/cyberpunk/The cyberdeck: https://pastebin.com/7fE4BVBgCyberlife: https://jinteki.industries/files/cyberlife.7zBibliothek: https://www.mediafire.com/folder/4m5hd2065hde8/Bibliothek>PrivacyTools: https://www.privacyguides.org/en/tools/Comment too long. Click here to view the full text.
>>107896125 >>107904600It has survived by posting contents such as news. The only bumps I see are the Lunarpunk bumps that by now are part of the tradition.I was planning to post about this one:https://www.rtl-sdr.com/open-space-an-open-soure-sdr-based-phased-array-for-bouncing-signals-off-the-moon/This lets you build a drone-to-drone relay chain that could cover huge areas with a private net. At 100 m altitude you can reach 42 km in radius. Some drones can reach 10 000 m which would reach 420 km. And with a cube sat you can reach most of a hemisphere.
>>107904845I haven't read the article and I'm not a drone expert, but aren't drone batteries pretty limited? Like you could have one up at that altitude for maybe a couple of hours, not more, right? Which is not necessarily a bad thing, you just have to work around those limits.
>>107904845also this:>Drones generally fly up to a legal limit of 400 feet (120 meters) above ground level (AGL) in many countries, including the U.S., UK, and EU, to avoid manned aircraft, but this can vary by location and drone type (recreational vs. commercial). Some nations like Germany have lower limits (around 230 ft), while others like Indonesia allow slightly higher (500 ft). Commercial pilots with waivers or special permissions can fly higher, but recreational flyers must always stay below the standard height limit and maintain visual line of sight. Which means the police will have an excuse to come knocking at your door if you do anything weird. In some EU countries you even have to have a license just to fly a drone, even if recreationally
What are you working in, anon?
>>107905304>aren't drone batteries pretty limited?True. Base station has no such limitation, but the drones will either have to be traditionally fuelled, work in shifts or be a balloon, or be a combination of these.>>107905324>the policeExcept in crisis, or outside territorial waters like other pirate stations, or in war as in Ukraine. In many countries, including NATO countries, radio amateur societies assist the government in crises. Where I live, these are ex military guys.
>Python with pointersC is literally that easy
>>107903862>16-bit x86 in protected mode with arrays > 64 KBI've used machines that could do that, but nobody actually configured the OS that way (or if they did, they kept most of it pretending to be real mode). Protected mode was largely a bust until 32-bit systems (and their better MMUs).
>>107903862>bank switchingThat has so much overhead without hardware support! It was more normal for languages of the time to simply not allow arrays to get bigger than a segment; if you wanted more, you had to use several arrays.Pointer arithmetic's never been defined between different arrays.
>>107903713(1/2)>only half their vulnerabilities are from memory safety vs logic bugsits hard to make this distinction for c, because things like buffer overflows are memory safety issues, caused by algorithmic errorsand when i talk about leading a project, im assuming no errors whatsoever in the finished product.>The return value has the same lifetime as s and the lifetime of t doesn't matter. The borrow checker correctly infers this.>Then you change something about the definition, and the borrow checker's heuristics fail to infer ityeah, but were not talking about the borrow checker. my method infers lifetimes by looking at the source itselfits really dead easy- the key aspect is the change of frame of reference. conceptually- you turn code into timelines, each timeline is a suite of statements applied to a certain set of data. its just a change in the way code is represented- just a change of coordinate systems, from function-centric, to data-centric.you derive lifetimes by just looking at the first and last operations applied to the data. you can change the definitions as much as you want, they dont intervene in the process of checking lifetimes. only the actual function calls do. (they do intervene in type checking though. another reason to use an external tool because void * opacifies the type to the language, but through a = b = c inference you can ""keep in mind"" the original type of the data.did i mention i really hate the borrow checker? because i do.>Explicit annotations force you to think about and make decisions about lifetimes.yeah, but they bloat the language. and one shouldnt need to think about lifetimes since theyre expressed in the code. im willing to use annotations only as a last resort, only where neededComment too long. Click here to view the full text.
>>107903727(2/2)>You have to tell the compiler about this.i dont. like i said, changing the game from having to check correctness throughout the whole user code to only having to guard at points where the users code interfaces with the libs would already solve 99.9% of purely mechanical* bugs that are to be found in c codebasesnot only theres less of them to be found, but also the bugs can only be in one place. this means not only less effort required but also the possibility to concentrate effort where it mattersbut also->not my code- not my problemand its not like the user could change anything about a borked, compiled libraryon the other hand, if everyone uses the tool, then everyone can focus on where their code interfaces with others'. which is where all the error checking should sit anyways, the rest to be dealt with through correct code*mechanical- thats where i would make the distinction in bug classes in ctheres what id tentatively call algorithmic errors, which are correct code, expressing the intent of the user, its just code that doesnt do what its supposed to do because of bad logicand theres what i would call mechanical errors. off by ones, double frees, type errorserrors that are errors because they do not express the intent of the user
>>107903713on another, less conciliating note>The Rust coreutils kind of suck but it's because the code is managed by unopinionated people with low standardsthis is extremely badand is characteristic of the rust communitythe lack of work ethics and political agendas, when not corporate onesand this bunch of dildos now want to rewrite sudo?honestly, the rust community should be ostracised from the programming world. like in quarantineyou wanna do your rust? go ahead. but stay the fuck away from critical systems, or any systems i would be using as far as im concerned
What went wrong?
>>107905638That's the cope you're going with?
>>107905695yes
>>107905706Based. I declare this man the winner of the thread and all of its women.
>>107900814the premise of this game is that there are projectiles that move independently of your character, so moving back and forwards thru various animations is your means of dodging them. By the end it gets unbelievably hard. I doubt casual players can make it to the end>>107902812nta but this is my favorite https://play.date/games/under-the-castle/>>107902824All true, funny that so many people assume it failed>>107904532It's possible to use both dpad and crank at the same time (like in a twin stick shooter) but it sucks and will cramp your shit up immediately. The best crank based games have only intermittent button presses
>>107895157The Obra Dinn dev didn't make a good game on this in time
I just bought Audeze Maxwell and I'm having issues with them. The game channel is way more quiet than the chat channel and the headpones also make a popping/crackling sound which is driving me insane. Is it possible to fix that?
>>107899598KEK
>>107899457Update the firmware on them and the receiver. Make sure you mess with the game/chat wheel. For the popping, firmware update may just fix it but you may need to try different USB ports on your PC/Console. The popping would happen to me every so often on my PC but it was like once a week at most.
>>107899457Mine used to crackle when I got them, but haven't noticed it for a while, and the separate channel volumes can be controlled with the other "volume" control on the headset
I think the crackle happens when the audio turns off on its own
>>107905050i see
Shot EditionPrevious Thread: >>107845785>Links:>DALL-E 3https://www.bing.com/images/createhttps://designer.microsoft.com/image-creator>4ohttps://chatgpt.com/https://sora.chatgpt.comhttps://copilot.microsoft.com/>Imagen 4 and Nano Banana (Pro)https://gemini.google.com/apphttps://labs.google/fx/tools/image-fxhttps://labs.google/fx/tools/whiskComment too long. Click here to view the full text.
>>107906083
>>107906132Thank you, but could you please make a non-fat version?
>>107906170