>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 Resourceshttps://gnu.org/s/emacshttps://github.com/emacs-tw/awesome-emacshttps://github.com/systemcrafters/crafted-emacs>Learning EmacsC-h t (Interactive Tutorial)https://emacs-config-generator.fly.devhttps://systemcrafters.net/emacs-from-scratchhttp://xahlee.info/emacshttps://emacs.tvComment too long. Click here to view the full text.
>>107553054do you seriously think that your civilian ass gets to witness the most novel developments in militaristic or fintech-esque AI systems?you have so much shit over your eyes, simply because "hurr ChatGPT cannot reliably count the letters in words" or whatever.as with every single other fucking thing on the planet, and in every single argument made throughout the history of human civilization, the naysayers are incorrect and the yesmen are incorrect. there is a middle ground. the middle ground of AI is absolutely threatening to the integrity of human civilization as we know it.
>>107553268kek the middle ground just so happens to be what AI companies want you to believe. alright
>>107553268>the middle ground of AI is absolutely threatening to the integrity of human civilization as we know it.Nah
>>107553268Most people still don't know it exists despite being publicized
>>107551579>Does it have... pointers? How does this work.In guile you can treat arrays as pointers with bytevector->pointer/pointer->bytevector to trade binary blobs with c libraries>>107552142Example of how inline assembly can be written:https://github.com/udem-dlteam/mimosa/blob/master/scheme/interpreted/x86-os.scm#L49
Best econony ever bond yields like no other - EditionApplication advice:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_TlqTVNtQd4Considering a side hustle?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2K-Gr7VLCi8>Interviewinghttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kE0x3i4IloI>How to write a resumehttps://github.com/0xCyberY/CVE-T4PDF>Salary StuffComment too long. Click here to view the full text.
>>107552221insane lifelong debt has been largely normalized so the cattle don't complain about it as long as they can still klarna an uber for their daily onions and amiibos
Does anyone else hate Mondays and weekdays, not because we’re employed, but because others are, and that means recruiters and hiring teams are working, so we all expect rejection emails to start flooding in throughout the week? I should be used to it by now, but I just simply hate rejection emails.
If you don't have a job why are you even on /g/?
Literally just join the Space Force or ICE and get a clearance, then quit and take it to the private sector for big TC. It's so easy.
>>107553648I just do it for the love of the game
DirectX8 Edition/gedg/ Wiki: https://igwiki.lyci.de/wiki//gedg/_-_Game_and_Engine_Dev_GeneralIRC: irc.rizon.net #/g/gedgProgress Day: https://rentry.org/gedg-jams/gedg/ Compendium: https://rentry.org/gedg/agdg/: >>>/vg/agdgGlide programming guidehttp://web.archive.org/web/20240604190650/http://bitsavers.informatik.uni-stuttgart.de/components/3dfx/Glide_Programming_Guide_3.0_199806.pdfhttp://web.archive.org/web/20241108213111/http://bitsavers.informatik.uni-stuttgart.de/components/3dfx/Glide_Reference_Manual_3.0_199806.pdfGPU tech spec and extension supporthttps://web.archive.org/web/20081216014653/http://www.delphi3d.net/hardware/index.phpComment too long. Click here to view the full text.
>>107553938I'm making a 2d game
>>107554008godot is the best option then
I just released a new version of Jumperia, check it out.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fins8w554xEhttps://rumba-studios.itch.io/jumperia
I'm working on this game where you play as a boy who is forced to go through a girls' school naked, what do you think?
>>107551738You mean the per-component animations on a skinned mesh, anon? You might be overthinking this...I assume you have a hierarchical skeleton implemented, and seams/bones that match up? Just treat the sub-meshes like you would a bone on the primary-- they need a frame of reference (position+rotation, hopefully not scale) that their parent accumulates and passes on to them, but nothing special. Just offset your bone IDs and make sure the transition verts don't have too many weights, then construct your bone transform buffer for all of em. Make sure to correlate verts+bone weights for that transition region too, easy way to catch errors that take forever to track otherwise.Still, most animation software plays fine with complex skeletons, right? Personally, unless I was doing stuff with dynamic meshes/skinning, I'd use a common skeleton and converting sub-mesh bone IDs to parent bone IDs, just share the bone uniform buffer between all that object's meshes-- it's already on the GPU, after all(but if you are doing dynamic stuff, check out libigl-- it's saved me a ton of time on my current project)
If you can't effortlessly produce 300k of production grade code with AI, you're a chump
>>107548059I'm smarter than him because my python program is 300,001 LoC long.https://gist.githubusercontent.com/bogasebuamoteraxu/1af2d0e892f12c65d6616757bbd59bcc/raw/809c07fad8bb0afd943d4dfd9226cd6bc9c763ee/fizzbuzz.py
>>107549800'The YAML Strikes Back' (2027) will save us.
If you're reliant on AI to build your program, would be stuck without it, and are unable to comment intelligently on the architecture YOU chose for your program and why YOU made the decisions you did then you're retarded and whatever shit you're building is worthless unreliable slop.BUTIf you're manually writing code that an LLM could be writing for you in a fraction of the time then you're just as retarded and also a luddite. It can save enormous amounts of time and effort. Treat it like a prolific but slightly unreliable junior dev, review everything it does.
>>107549141> tend to "forget" about existing codeIs this a context size issue?
>>107553489Partially, but more so to do with the fact that LLM's have no capacity for building any internal structure of what they're dealing with like a human mind does, they deal in linear sequences and not recursive structures like hierarchies or trees.
>Aegis Legend III Mod>Wotofo Profile X RTA>imported Japanese Muji cotton pads>SS316L mesh coils for TCRI love technology
>>107550298I think he's making a heat pump joke, but I don't know for sure.
>Inhale the Chinese unrestricted warfare chemicals
>>107551880Make your own
>>107552009That takes effort
>>107537199/r/technology>>107537245this
>micron only selling to AI companies>nvidia wont sell cards with vram on them anymore>samsung shut down consumer SSDs, will only sell to AI companies>leaks of TSMC shutting down entire retail order sections, make 80% of output only to sell directly to AI companies>no new gen consumer GPU, nvidia and AMD full pivot into AI TPUs>governments restrict home power usage to limit power factor bottlenecks for AI datacenters>taxes being raised by 5% per person, per year to construct nuclear power plants exlusively to power AI data centers>WEF and Blackrock funded cleansing of the seabed along all major countries, in order to turn the entire atlantic and pacific coasts of america and europe into data center cooling facilities>empty all gold reserves in the world to build more AI chips and asics>government programs to ravage entire national parks to make way for AI data centers>AI data centers all around the earths orbit, blocking out the sun, leading to total ecological collapse and no food, only bugs available for sustenanceYou will own nothing and you will be happy and you will prompt AI for slop cat videos
>>107546680thanks clanker
>>107545529wtf I love China now?!
>>107548142there will NEVER be AGI
>>107545529You left out>Apple bought 60& of TSMC's upcoming 2nm production output
>>107545529
Samsung stops SATA SSD production https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qtQzR4ASkW8
>>107535868The problem is the government and federal reserve printing trillions.But you retards NEVER go after them, in fact you support them.Useful idiots.
>>107539591The federal reserve printing money created the AI bubble and created the MALINVESTMENT we are seeing.Resources are being moved from one sector to another artificially.
>>107536173the 99% of the public you're talking about are 1 to 2 million pc goymers.>Loan this out as cloud computing to users?Why would they do this when laptops and lower specced prebuilts are and will be affordable in the future?
>>107541873Glowie confirmed.
>>107554126>Suffers from main character symptom and unwarranted self-importance. Sad
Roomba maker iRobot, who answered the question, "Would my vacuum cleaner be better on my Wi-Fi, so it can spy and bug my house more effectively" is filing for bankruptcy and selling its assets to Shenzhen PICEA Robotics Co. and Santrum Hong Kong Co.https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-12-15/robot-vacuum-roomba-maker-files-for-bankruptcy-after-35-years
Western bros rise up.
>Buy an adI'm not a shill, this thing's expensive and not even out. And i bet the purple plastic degrades faster even if it looks better.Is the ayn thor good for 3ds? Battery life and replaceability? Touch pad usage? Taking saves and data from a real 3ds? Too much to ask for streetpass?And why does it say pre order if so many people are already reviewing it
>>107554319Buy an ad
Do x86 android based systems still exist?BlissOS seems dead.
>>107550894
>>107550894A number of mobile devices were x86 and you had apps for both.So yeah.
>>107550894haven't seen them in a while, the replacement is chromeOS and similar which as far as I know can run android apps. If you need to run some android natively under x86 the best bet is to use the SDK and install an emulator, which is not an emulator but a vm instead, pretty fast by the way
Cyberpunk feels outdated because conglomerates aren't actually very efficient and most companies stay in their own lane
>>107552804...and I would even argue the Web is growing. But the Web is tiny compared to the number of people who just transitioned from watching TV to watching algoslop, a crowd that outnumbers us easily 50 to 1 if not 99 to 1, and it's just not very interesting or cyberpunk that most people sit in front of video they can't meaningfully interact with. Look at this essay I've written you. It's a pretty short essay, I banged it out in probably 20 minutes. Writing this essay would come across as DERANGED behavior to the group I'm describing. In so far as they've ever contributed to the project or output of linking computers together, they've submitted their face and voice to Tiktok, in what is basically a globally sourced iteration of American Idol. The love of networking and interaction does not flow through people who are happy in these places. The world depicted in Serial Experiments Lain simply did not transpire, sorry. The internet is for TV and video games and most people are TOTALLY disengaged from it.>3) Culture is broadly stagnantI'm not really super interested in the why of this but it's obvious. Many people have observed that if you transported an ordinary person from 2002 to your bedroom he would find your clothes fairly ordinary. This decade has seen a seemingly random revival in the popularity of Country music, literally pop-country is popular with college kids right now. This is not a culture where explosive technological development is engendering new and alien cultural forms and social organizations. There are lots of other examples. I think Spotify's back catalog pretty reliably outperforms new, popular music. Netflix's back catalog might follow this principle too. And there is, of course, the remake/remaster epidemic that frustrates people so much.
>>107552970As a final note (and this is the roughest and most theoretical thing I'm gaming out) I'd argue that genAI will choke things off further. We're already in a situation where basically the only important technological development of the last 40 years, the linking of computers to rapidly exchange complex information, failed to generate broader scientific explosion, and mostly turned into television. Now we are completely loading all our ammunition into something that does nothing but produce PREDICTIVE television. Yes, I'm aware of the productivity improvements, I have Copilot at work. But those productivity improvements are MINOR relative to the decline in trustworthiness of information and the general sense among people that the signal/noise ratio on the internet is getting much worse and rapidly. I think we're literally just walking backwards here, out of proto-cyberpunk back into village life. We're witnessing the return of "I don't know" as a thing people have to seriously sit with when wanting to know anything nontrivial. There are a couple of democratic institutions, like Wikipedia, that are obviously not dumpster fires, but those only go so far. Wikipedia is just an encyclopedia.A lot of my thinking is sourced from this essay I've come to view as fairly seminal, written a whole three years ago, if you'd like to see where I lifted a lot of this:https://samkriss.substack.com/p/the-internet-is-already-overSorry for rambling
>>107544409>Cyberpunk feels outdated because conglomerates aren't actually very efficient and most companies stay in their own laneJews did this to us.They even import poojeets now, all in the name of short-term profits. Based China is the cybertopia future.
>>107553062Screencapped your essay. Liked it a lot.What do you think, see and feel is "coming next"?
>>107544409Cyberpunk feels outdated because Capitalism is outdated.
Who's the greatest living programmer?
guy steele created all the important lisps, so maybe he gets an honorable mention.
>>107550362Terry Davies>I- I said livingHe is living in our hearts
>tells them that their code is insecure dog shit
>>107553326Unironically this
VaxryyDHHPOWER GAPEbussy
>In recent years, technological development of nuclear fusion power generation, also known as the "energy of dreams," has been accelerating both domestically and internationally.>In Japan, the industry is excited by the arrival of Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, who has been promoting the development. The government has set an ambitious goal of "demonstrating power generation in the 2030s."mainichi.jp/articles/20251114/k00/00m/020/299000c
>>107552351That's not what I asked. I asked whether they're ahead of the world (like you claimed Japan is), not whether they're good at it.
It's been 15 years and Japan still hasn't been able to get back to the nuclear power generation levels before the 2011 earthquake. But, sure, magic will happen in 2030.
>>107549479Fusion power is going to cause more radiation than current nuclear reactors.Why does everyone seem to conveniently forget this fact?The best way forward is still to use clean coal and natural gas.
>>107554169bait used to be believable
>>107551736Agreed that %industrial exports is not a great metric. The US has a high agriculture export because it has lots of fertile land, Japan and Korea do not. However, Japan still is a leader in advanced manufacturing. There are indexes that track this, but a basic knowledge of high tech supply chains would already tell you this. Also read his post again, it's specifically advanced manufacturing.>>107551059>birth rateChina has a lower birth rate than Japan
Ask your BSD-related questions here, discuss tips and tricks, share scripts, and everything in between.>Mainline distributionshttps://www.openbsd.orghttps://www.freebsd.orghttps://www.netbsd.orghttps://www.dragonflybsd.org>Extra user-friendlyhttps://www.ghostbsd.orghttps://www.midnightbsd.org>Security-focused, pentestinghttps://www.hardenedbsd.org>Homelab/NAShttps://www.truenas.comComment too long. Click here to view the full text.
just got filtered by the openbsd installer as a 5+ year gentoo user.into the trash it goes...
>>107550430What's on FreeBSD TV tonight? owo
good to know my bsd bros made their own general
>>107553826>I've heard before OpenBSD is slow, but why is that? And how slow is it in everyday use?OpenBSD prioritises security over speed.>What's the deal with the file systems I keep hearing about?Do you mean ZFS? Unlike Linux, FreeBSD offers full support for it. It is the current standard file system.>How "free" is it really? Specially when compared to "libre" distros like Parabola or Guix.According to the GNU definition, BSD is not "free" at all.>What desktop environments are available?The big BSDs support all of the desktop environments available on Linux. Only NetBSD is the odd one out; it does not support KDE Plasma.>Thoughts on Hyperbola BSD?None.>>107553912Could you provide more details about exactly what the problem was with the OpenBSD installer? Also, try FreeBSD.
>>107552742>I actually wish there was a BSD that embraced GNU/GPL softwareHyperbolaBSD SoonTM
https://youtube.com/shorts/baiEHMne2XE?si=Ke6eUUam5bCt0rQl
>>107527879You used to be able to sniff for MAC addresses and use authenticated addresses to get free Internet without worrying about the hour limit. I had about 500 MAC addresses that I'd pick from until they switched off of that system.
>>107553571So I could possibly get up to my 1Gbit current speed? Potentially.
>>107553610Yeah, it is not impossible to end up with that. Likely it will be less because that's a lot of channels and might put you to DOCSIS3.0+ territory, when that happens they tend to have BPI+ activated and for that you need to get pretty much everything right in your config. It is doable but don't be disappointed if you don't end up with 1Gbit.
>>107526807>spectrum ISP routerstill have no clue why those have a fucking GPS antenna
>he doesn't have free WiFi in his city